Digitized  by  the  Internet  Archive 

in  2007  with  funding  from 

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http://www.archive.org/details/bluegoldbeingrecOOunivrich 


73  3i 


Copyrighted,  1912 

by 

Clare    Morse   Torrey 

and 

Richard    Whitney    Rust 


Printed    by 

Taylor,  Nash  &  Taylor 

San    Francisco 


,® 


P^KSSG^r^^^far 

^V^Br®Jr>l 

niJBj^.JS^" 

%^* 


'©JW! 


& 


><G>, 


TO 

JAMES   KENNEDY    MOFFITT 

REGENT  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 

A  WORKER  IN  THE  SERVICE  OF 

CALIFORNIA 

THIS  BOOK  IS  DEDICATED 


ALIFORXIA  is  a  State  University.  The  spirit 
of  California  the  Western  State  is,  too,  the  spirit 
of  California,  the  Western  University.  The 
history  of  days  of  Spanish  occupation,  of  gold 
seeking  in  '49,  of  the  more  modern  progressive- 
ness  and  independence  of  the  greatest  Pacific  State,  are  the 
common  heritage  of  both  State  and  University.  For  the 
freedom  of  California,  the  State,  finds  true  expression  in  the 
spirit  of  California,  the  University ;  and  those  other  elements 
which  make  California  an  institution  among  the  really  great 
are,  after  all,  but  indications  in  the  younger  sons  of  California 
of  the  spirit  of  romance,  of  breadth,  of  tolerance  and  freedom 
which  have  been  stuff  of  the  very  soul  of  California. 

It  has  been  our  intention  to  make  this  book  representa- 
tive of  the  spirit  which  imbues  both  State  and  University. 
We  have  tried  to  show,  in  a  series  of  articles,  written  by  those 
best  acquainted  with  Western  life,  the  intimacy  of  relationship 
existing  between  the  two,  which  are,  after  all,  one.  The  con- 
nection is  close ;  it  is  for  the  present  undergraduates  to  foster 
and  cherish,  both  now  and  hereafter,  the  tie  which  makes  both 
but  different  phases  of  California. 

We  are  indebted  to  the  authors  of  the  articles  which 
follow  more  than  we  can  say.  They  have,  in  no  small  measure, 
made  the  book. 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


Jftat  Hux! 


Wbat  can  toe  tiring  tbee,  Jfllotber,  toe,  tfjj>  broob 
(0f  ruggeb  nurslings  caugfjt  fast  in  tb'  embrace 

(^f  tfjp  great,  pearning,  tenber  amplitube, 
?KBbat  offering  of  bue  praise,  of  meetest  grace  ? 

(Kfjou  tooulbst  not  gifts  of  golb, — pet  Sucb  a  botoer 
WL&&  bear  unto  tbe  beart  of  many  a  queen, — 

J£or  tbat  tobicb  sabors  of  tbe  perfunctorp  tjour 
OTtjeretn  is  justice  torougbt  toitb  naugfjt  bettoeen ; 

ilor  bost  tfjou  asfe  tbat  toe  return  anon, 
Rearing  tfjee  toreatbs,  trim  cbaplets,  all  intact ; 

M  unbesmircbeb,  pet  mag  it  brabelp  bone 

(To  beem  tbat  tficst  mere  all  tljott  cottlbst  babe  lacfeeb  ? 

iHotber  of  Higbt,  entbronib  tobere  tfje  bills 
£>toeep  boton  as  from  tb'  €ternal,  anb  tbe  sea 

Haps  eager  toitb  lorn  boice  tbat  neber  stills 
Jts  questing  for  tbe  GTrutb  tbat  mafeetb  free, 

0  &lma  iWater,  grant  tb?  cbilbren  rise 
9*  suppliants,  clasping  of  tbp  knees,  anb  claim 

QDbe  guerbon  of  tbp  bope  in  bigb  emprise! 
Coucb  us,  enboto  our  souls  eben  uuttlj  tljp  flame ! 

Uorratne  gnbretos,  '12 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 

The  Spirit  of  Service 

HE  UNIVERSITY  is  a  State  university  in  a  wideness  of  mean- 
ing that  few  comprehend.  The  great  mass  of  its  students — 
forty-five  hundred  of  them — are  assembled  at  Berkeley.  This 
is  the  place  where  the  teaching  is  done.  Setting  of  standards 
and  search  for  truth  are,  however,  obligations  upon  it  as  well 
as  teaching.  The  University  exists  in  the  Pathological  Laboratory  at  Whit- 
tier,  the  Forestry  Station  at  Santa  Monica,  the  Citrus  Station  at  Riverside, 
the  Imperial  Valley  Station  at  Meloland,  the  Marine  Biological  Station  near 
San  Diego,  the  Lick  Observatory  on  Mount  Hamilton,  the  Kearney  Farm  at 
Fresno,  the  Physiological  Seaside  Laboratory  at  Monterey,  the  Forestry  Sta- 
tion at  Chico,  the  University  Farm  at  Davis,  and  the  Affiliated  College  build- 
ings in  San  Francisco.  At  all  of  these  places  work  is  being  done  for  the 
good  of  the  State.  The  provision  for  support  made  by  the  State  is  scattered 
over  all  these  institutions.  The  figures  look  large  in  the  unqualified  total, 
but  really  the  sum  provided  is  utterly  inadequate  for  the  range  and  impor- 
tance of  the  enterprises  involved.  So  great  is  the  range  that  the  forty-five 
hundred  students  at  Berkeley  come  sadly  short.  But  on  the  other  hand  the 
students,  even  if  they  do  sit  on  window  seats  at  the  lectures,  have  the  joy 
of  participating  in  a  State-wide  work.  They  belong  to  something  great  and 
worth  while.  Perhaps  those  boys  that  sit  on  the  window  seats  will  get  just 
as  much  as  if  they  sat  in  the  midst  of  elbow  room  with  vacant  desks  on  each 
side  of  them.  They  know  there  is  power  and  movement  in  the  development 
of  this  great  undertaking,  even  though  its  deficits  and  its  defects  be  large  as 
they  are  patent.  It  is  an  institution  that  is  trying  to  serve  the  State  in  all 
matters  where  scientific  determinations  can  be  utilized  by  the  government 
of  the  State.  It  deals  in  its  hygienic  laboratory  with  the  testing  of  disease, 
in  another  department  with  the  applications  of  the  pure  food  law,  in  another 
laboratory  with  the  testing  of  fertilizers,  in  another  with  the  diseases  of  trees 
and  plants.  It  might  well  be  entrusted,  through  its  department  of  political 
science,  with  most  of  the  business  of  framing  the  devices  required  by  new 
legislation,  if  not  the  form  of  the  legislation  itself.  It  stands  to  serve  the 
schools  wherever  it  can,  to  forward  the  cause  of  good  taste  and  morals  every- 
where in  life.  It  never  was  called  upon  yet  by  the  State  that  it  did  not 
hearken — it  stands  here  ready  to  serve. 

Benj.  Ide  Wheeler. 


13 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


What  Has  the  University  Done  for  California? 

T  WAS  the  desire  of  the  young-  men  of  '49  that  California 
should  have  a  splendid  free  public  school  system,  crowned  by 
a  great  free  university.  Themselves  without  wives  and  chil- 
dren, none  of  them  purposing  to  remain  longer  here  than 
would  be  necessary  to  take  from  the  mines  modest  competen- 
cies, the  youthful  pioneers  of  California  laid  deep  and  broad  in  the  State's 
first  constitution  the  foundation  upon  which  now  stands  our  University. 

That  University  is  intended  to  fill  the  higher-educational  wants  of  all 
the  people  of  this  State.  Do  California's  farmers  need  expert  advice  con- 
cerning their  soils,  their  crops,  the  duty  of  irrigation  water,  the  kind  of  fer- 
tilizer needed  to  keep  up  their  fertile  acres,  or  any  other  aid  or  advice,  or 
knowledge — the  experts  at  the  University,  paid  by  the  people  of  the  State, 
are  at  their  disposal. 

Does  the  planter  of  wheat,  the  grower,  of  citrus  of  deciduous  fruits, 
the  viticulturist,  the  possessor  of  timber,  the  breeder  of  livestock,  the  dairy- 
man want  to  know  what  is  best  for  him  to  do  under  certain  contingencies — 
the  University  people  are  ready  and  willing  and  glad  to  furnish  him  with 
the  best  knowledge  possessed  by  the  world  in  that  matter. 

Do  the  rancher's  sons  or  daughters  want  to  become  scientific,  expert 
farmers,  the  University's  College  of  Agriculture,  with  its  attendant  Univer- 
sity Farm,  is  open  to  them. 

If  our  young  men  or  young  women  desire  to  become  electrical,  or  min- 
ing, or  civil  engineers;  or  to  study  chemistry  in  any  or  all  its  branches,  or 


14 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


THE  LICK   OliSERYATORY.    MOl'NT    HAMILTON 


to  become  acquainted  with  the  science  of  commerce,  or  to  learn  the  modern 
languages,  acquaintanceship  with  which  California's  rapidly  developing  trade 
and  commerce  are  rendering  necessary;  or  to  devote  themselves  to  any  of 
the  arts  and  sciences  that  tend  to  the  material  advancement  of  the  business 
of  the  State — California's   University  gives  them  the  opportunity  to  do  so. 

Our  University's  alumni  are  known  to  and  trusted  by  all  the  world. 
Are  mining  engineers  wanted  to  develop  and  manage  the  mines  of  California 
and  other  States,  of  Mexico,  of  Central  and  South  America,  of  South  Africa — 
University  of  California  men  are  called  upon  to  do  it.  The  active  manage- 
ment of  the  De  Beers  diamond  mines  has  been  for  many  years  in  the  hands  of 
a  California  alumnus. 

Are  chemists  needed  on  sugar  plantations  and  in  sugar  mills  at  home 
or  abroad — our  graduates  are  sought  for. 

Are   trained   consuls   and   diplomatic   attaches   needed   to   represent   this 
nation  in  foreign  countries — 
our  University  furnishes  its 
share  of  them. 

In  short,  there  is  no 
avenue  of  material  advance- 
ment for  California  and  the 
world  that  is  not  traversed 
by  some  of  those  who  have 
worn   the   Blue  and   Gold. 

The  law  and  medicine 
also  have  their  colleges  in 
connection  with  our  Univer-  santa  monica  forestry  station 


15 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


SAN   DIEGO   MARINE   BIOLOGICAL   STATION 


sity  and  the  world-famous  Lick  Observatory  furnishes  astronomers  to  observa- 
tories in  every  part  of  the  western  hemisphere. 

There  are  those  who  hold  that  a  State  University,  supported  by  the 
hard-earned  money  of  the  people,  should  spend  neither  time  nor  money  in 
teaching  "the  dead  languages."  California  would  be  ashamed  were  her 
University  inferior  in  any  particular  to  the  best  university  our  country 
possesses.  It  would  be  inferior  did  it  not  give  to  those  who  desire  it  the 
opportunity  to  study  the  classics.  And  so,  as  a  matter  of  course,  California's 
University  teaches  "the  dead  languages"  as  well  as  she  teaches  the  material 
arts  and  sciences. 

In  short,  as  it  is  needed  and  called  for,  no  branch  of  human  knowledge 
is  neglected  at  the  State's  great  school.  It  is  the  people's  clearing  house  for 
learning  and  knowledge — the  people's  educational  forum.  As  such  it  must 
supply  the  State  with  every  kind  of  knowledge  and  learning  that  is  needed  to 
fit  such  of  its  men  and  women  as  desire  to  avail  themselves  of  it  for  that 
station  in  life  to  which  they  may  aspire. 

But  these  are  not  the  only  things  the  University  is  doing  for  the  State. 
It  is  fitting  our  youth  to  take  their  places  in  the  State's  public  life.  Her 
sons  and  daughters  are  busying  themselves,  as  all  good  men  and  women 
should,  more  and  more  with  their  politics,  the  politics  of  the  State.  They  are 
giving  California's  politics  a  higher  tone,  they  are  fighting  political  corrup- 
tion, they  are  striving  for  a  better  government  for  the  people  and  for 
themselves. 

At  every  session  of  the  Legislature  there  go  to  the  State  Capitol  those 
who  have  worn  the  Blue  and  Gold.  Two  Justices  of  our  Supreme  Court  and 
two  Governors  have  hailed  from  Berkeley's  great  institution.      Mayors,  city 

16 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 

eouncilmen,  district  attorneys,   superior  judges  and  many  other  public   ser- 
vants look  back  to  the  years  they  spent  beneath  the  Berkeley  oaks. 

Does  the  University  repay  the  people  of  California  for  the  money  they 
have  invested  in  it?  Does  it  pay  the  people  of  a  State  to  have  educated  men 
and  women,  scientific  men  and  women,  expert  men  and  women,  learned  men 
and  women,  high-principled  men  and  women,  patriotic  men  and  women  who 
know  the  dangers  that  beset  popular  government  and  are  alive  to  offset  those 
dangers?  If  so,  the  University  of  California  repays  the  people  of  California 
for  the  money  they  have  spent  at  Berkeley.  The  University  is  giving  the 
State  just  those  kinds  of  men  and  women. 

Is  the  University  a  democracy  where  merit  alone  counts,  and  wealth  and 
station  cut  no  figure?  The  spectacle  of  students  waiting  on  the  tables  of 
their  classmates  and  performing  other  so-called  menial  services,  and  losing 
neither  their  own  self-respect  nor  the  respect  of  their  fellows,  proves  that 
the  University  is  a  democracy,  at  which  many  of  the  young  men  and  women 
of  this  State  are  being  fitted  to  take  part  in  Californian  and  American 
democracy. 

Out  of  many  similar  examples  I  have  in  mind  one  member  of  my  own 
class,  who,  as  did  others  of  our  classmates,  worked  his  way  through  college 
and  was  not  ashamed  to  perform,  nor  were  his  fellows  ashamed  to  see  him 
perform,  any  sort  of  service  to  -support  himself.  Since  graduation  that  man 
has  perfected  mining  processes  which  have  saved  the  people  of  this  State 
many  times  all  that  the  University  ever  will  cost  them.  Neither  he  nor 
others  who  have  done  much  for  the  people  of  the  State  could  have  gotten 
their  educations  had  the  people  not  given  them  a  free  University. 

Such  examples  of  the  democracy  and  worth  of  the  University  are  so 
common  that  those  who  are  acquainted  with  them  have  long  since  ceased  to 
regard  them  as  anything  but  the  everyday  incidents  of  University  life ;  as 
anything  more  than  the  expected,  regular  and  sure  products  of  the  University's 
educational  grist. 

California  and  the  world  are  better,  richer  and  more  livable  because  our 
University  has  given  to  many,  many  men  and  women  the  opportunity  to 
excel-— an  opportunity  which  never  could  have  been  theirs  had  it  not  been 
for  the  People's  University  at  Berkeley. 

California's  people  have  done  much,  very,  very  much,  for  their  Univer- 
sity. And  the  University,  in  its  turn,  has  done,  as  it  should,  much,  very  much 
for  the  people  of  California. 

George  C.  Pardee. 

17 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


The  University  and  the  State 

E  love  the  University  of  California  most  of  all  because  of  her  ideal 
of  service  to  the  State.  As  alumni,  we  take  pride  in  the  knowl- 
edge that  the  lesson  which  she  teaches  most  earnestly  is  the  duty 
and  privilege  of  citizenship.  Immensely  more  important  than  the 
mastery  of  facts  or  the  acquisition  of  polish  is  the  advancement 
of  the  happiness  and  prosperity  of  the  great  mass  of  the  people  of  this  State. 
Knowledge  alone,  training  alone,  ability  alone  are  not  sufficient  to  attain  this  end. 
We  need  men  who  will  apply  these  qualities  in  the  light  of  ideals  of  service  to 
their  fellowmen.  It  is  not  enough  for  a  university  to  teach  the  truth.  The 
world  needs  men  of  character  and  determination  who  will  go  out  into  the  world 
with  enthusiasm  and  inspiration  to  fight  for  the  truth.  We  rejoice  that  the 
University  of  California,  fully  mindful  of  her  duty  and  privilege  as  bene- 
ficiary of  the  State,  has  as  her  highest  ambition  to  give  to  the  State  men  of 
such  type. 

In  her  vistas  of  mountain  and  sea,  the  wealth  of  her  rivers  and  fields,  the 
blue  of  her  skies  and  the  gold  of  her  sunshine,  and  the  enterprise,  refinement 
and  broad  humanity  of  her  people,  California  is  the  favored  daughter  of 
our  Union.  It  seems  most  fitting  and  appropriate  that  in  these  surround- 
ings there  should  grow  up  one  of  the  greatest  universities  of  the  world  — 
great  in  the  learning  and  ability  of  her  faculty,  in  the  wealth  and  beauty  of  her 
buildings  and  in  the  number  and  zeal  of  her  students,  but,  greatest  of  all  in  her 
endeavor  to  aid  in  the  solution  of  the  living  problems  which  affect  the  happi- 
ness and  prosperity  of  the  State  and  its  people.  To  accomplish  this  end.  two 
conditions  at  least  must  concur  —  the  University  must  continue  to  attract 
students  who  are  democratic,  ambitious  and  willing  to  work,  and  she  must 


18 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 

remain  true  to  her  present  great  ideal  which  springs  from  her  position  as  a 
State  institution. 

Recent  events  have  demonstrated  strikingly  the  loyalty  of  the  University  of 
California's  alumni.  This  is  not  a  loyalty  merely  of  locality  or  association.  The 
feeling  goes  deeper  than  that.  It  is  a  loyalty  to  the  University  because  of  the 
things  for  which  she  stands  in  the  life  of  the  State.  It  is  a  loyalty  which  finds 
expression  in  this  wish  —  May  the  University  so  act  and  may  her  sons  and 
daughters  so  do  their  work  that  when  the  student  of  the  future,  long  after 
the  granite  walls  on  our  campus  shall  have  crumbled  to  dust,  turns  over  the 
pages  of  the  history  of  the  State  of  California  and  comes  to  the  page  which 
tells  the  story  of  our  alma  mater,  he  shall  find  there,  written  in  letters  of 
gold,  this  legend : 

The  University  of  California. 

A  university  of  sympathy,  humanity,  service. 

The  daughter  of  the  State. 

The  mother  of  good  citizens.  Max  Thelen. 


KEARNEY    ESTATE  —  AN    ENTRANCE 


19 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


The  Spirit  of  California 

AM  bidden  to  write  on  the  Spirit  of  California  as  represented 
in  the  University  of  California  upon  the  lines  of  a  talk  I  had  the 
honor  of  being  asked  to  deliver  at  the  Freshman  Rally  in  the 
Greek  Theatre.  Others  are  to  write  on  more  concrete  subjects 
connected  with  the  growth  and  organization  of  the  University. 
Theirs  is  the  easier  task,  for  they  can  use  statistics  and  fill  their  papers  with 
facts  and  valuable  information,  whereas  I  have  to  call  upon  my  memory  for 
the  ideas  inspired  by  looking  upon  the  massed  crowds  of  students  collected  in 
the  Greek  Theatre  upon  one  of  the  significant  occasions  of  the  University  year. 
It  is  one  thing  to  speak  to  an  audience  of  thousands  on  a  great  occasion  ;  it  is 
quite  another  to  gather  up  such  ideas  and  set  them  down  in  the  limits  of  a 
brief  article,  even  if  it  is  intended  for  so  special  a  class  of  readers  as  the 
readers  of  the  Blue  and  Gold. 

The  Spirit  of  California!  It  is  the  spirit  of  many  civilizations  and  many 
races  here  forged  into  one  people  looking  westward  over  the  Pacific  Ocean 
and  knowing  that  it  can  not  leap  that  ocean  and  spread  any  further.  All  these 
civilizations  are  represented  in  the  University  of  California.  Look  over  a  list 
of  the  students  in  the  University  and  you  will  be  struck  by  the  variety  of 
names  and  the  diversity  of  races  represented.  Here,  in  the  class-room  or  in 
the  Greek  Theatre,  can  be  found  representatives  of  the  various  European 
civilizations. — Englishmen,  filtered  through  New  England  or  Virginia  and 
preserving  the  marked  effect  of  American  life  upon  the  original  stock,— 
Scotchmen  either  of  direct  importation  or  filtered  through  American  experi- 
ence but  always  preserving  their  marked  characteristics, — Irishmen  with  the 


20 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


THE      ALBATROSS 


never-dying  enthusiasm  for 
Old  Ireland  and  its  distinc- 
tive qualities, —  Germans 
from  both  North  and  South, 
Protestant  and  Catholic, — 
Scandinavians  with  their 
fair  hair  and  blue  eyes, — 
Frenchmen  with  their  pride 
in  being  the  interpreters  of 
new  ideas, —  Italians  with 
the  memories  of  their  long 
primacy  in  things  intellec- 
tual,—  Spaniards  who  feel 
at  home  in  a  land  so  full  of 
Spanish  names  and  Spanish 
traditions, —  and   with  them 

mingled  yet  older  and  more  ancient  peoples,  whose  traditions  antedate  those  of 
European  civilization,  such  as  Armenians  and  Syrians  and  Hindus  and  Chinese 
and  Japanese.  To  all  of  these  races  California  has  been  a  kindly  foster  mother 
and  all  of  them  find  a  welcome  in  her  State  University.  The  California  Spirit  is 
cosmopolitan ;  it  welcomes  all  religions  and  all  races.  It  has  grown  out  of  a 
boundless  hospitality,  and  it  receives  its  broad  and  tolerant  character  from  the 
mingling  within  its  borders  of  all  who  would  come  to  make  their  home  under  its 
shelter.  First  and  foremost,  then,  the  Spirit  of  California  is  broad,  tolerant 
and  hospitable. 

But  the  Spirit  of  California  is  not  only  broad,  it  is  also  pre-eminently 
romantic.  Other  States  of  America,  other  countries  of  the  world,  are  pre- 
eminently industrial  or  commercial,  military  or  naval,  religious  or  political, 
but  California  is  above  all  the  land  of  romance.  This  romance  is  in  part  his- 
toric. The  first  explorations  of  her  coast,  the  first  settlements  of  Spanish 
soldiers  in  her  presidios  and  of  Spanish  friars  in  her  missions,  have  given  to 
her  the  glamor  of  an  age  not  represented  in  the  early  history  of  other  Ameri- 
can States.  The  rush  of  immigration  in  the  days  of  gold  brought  to  the  land 
of  sleepy  memories  of  Spanish  civilization  an  heroic  race  of  pioneers.  And 
since  that  time  the  flood  of  immigration  into  the  United  States  has  only  sent 
the  strongest  and  the  most  daring  to  its  westernmost  limits.  The  students  of 
the  University  of  California  represent  all  these  different  stocks,  and  there  is 
hardly  a  family  without  the  tradition  of  some  heroic  ancestor,  who  made  his 
way  hither  far  from  his  native  land  amidst  peril  and  hardship.    The  romance 


21 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 

of  her  settlement  has  contributed  its  share  to  the  Spirit  of  California  and  can 
be  seen  in  the  University  as  well  as  in  the  other  enterprises  of  the  State.  But 
the  romance  of  California  is  not  all  in  her  history.  It  is  also  born  of  the 
beauty  and  variety  of  the  State.  The  charm  of  Greece  rests  on  the  mountains 
and  the  olive  groves  of  California;  the  blue  sky  of  Italy  rouses  the  same 
delight  here  as  in  the  home  of  Virgil  and  of  Dante ;  California  is  a  land  of 
the  sunshine  and  the  ocean  and  draws  from  them  the  sense  of  breadth  and 
beauty  that  has  aroused  poets  and  painters  in  all  ages  of  the  past.  This 
romance  of  California,  a  romance  of  history  and  of  beauty,  has  led  to  a  develop- 
ment of  art  and  literature  in  the  growing  State  and  must  lead  to  further 
developments  hereafter.  The  students  of  the  University  feel  in  Berkeley  that 
they  inherit  this  Spirit  of  romance  and  the  influence  it  spreads  in  literature 
and  in  art.  The  very  existence  of  the  Greek  Theatre  and  the  endeavors  of 
the  students  to  give  worthy  performances  there  show  that  the  Spirit  of  Cali- 
fornia is  embodied  there  as  elsewhere  in  the  State. 

Broad  hospitality,  deep  romantic  feeling,  and  the  qualities  that  go  with 
them  have  produced  a  California  character  that  is  as  distinct  as  the  California 
atmosphere.  The  habit  of  living  out  of  doors  close  to  nature,  intimacy  with 
great  spaces  and  great  heights,  the  absence  of  overwhelming  traditions  and 
narrow-minded  prejudices,  have  given  the  Californians,  both  men  and  women, 
a  more  reckless  courage  and  a  greater  sense  of  daring-  than  other  people.  But 
with  this  has  come  a  gaiety  of  heart  that  comes  not  from  ancestry  or  sur- 
roundings, but  from  the  spirit  that  California  has  engendered.  The  gay 
courage  of  the  people  of  San  Francisco  after  the  great  fire  of  1906  roused  the 
admiration  of  the  world  and  gave  an  opportunity  for  all  civilized  peoples  to 
show  their  appreciation  of  California.  The  California  Spirit  was  as  evident 
among  the  students  at  the  University  as  it  was  upon  the  other  side  of  the  Bay. 
Those  of  us  who  lived  through  those  days  remember  how  the  students  got 


MM(**T±]0fi* 


■^Jt1"*4 


KEARNEY    FARM 


22 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


AT    HARVARD 


together  to  aid  the  refugees 
who  came  over  from  San 
Francisco.  We  shall  ever 
bear  in  mind  the  camps  on 
California  Field  and  on  the 
old  baseball  grounds,  the  hos- 
pital in  Hearst  Hall,  the  ready 
service  of  meals  in  the  circles 
by  the  bridge,  but  most  of 
all  we  remember  not  only  the 
helpfulness  of  the  students, 
both  men  and  women,  but 
their  cheerfulness.  Though 
they  lost  their  extravaganza 
and  the  other  delights  of 
Commencement  Week,  they 
held  together  and  carried  out  such  parts  of  their  annual  ceremonies  as  they  could 
with  unabated  cheerfulness  and  good  humor. 

The  Spirit  of  California,  which  is  the  Spirit  of  the  University  of  California, 
can  not  be  analyzed  and  divided  into  its  component  parts,  and  only  certain  of 
its  most  marked  characteristics  can  be  alluded  to  in  such  a  brief  paper  as  this. 
What  I  desired  to  impress  upon  the  Freshmen  in  the  speech  that  I  have  more 
than  half  forgotten  was  that  they  should  inherit  this  Spirit  of  tolerance  and 
romance  and  gay  courage,  and  that  they  should  hold  to  it  as  the  particular 
characteristic  not  only  of  the  State  of  California  but  of  its  University.  It  is 
hard  to  live  up  to  high  ideals,  but  we  can  be  aided  if  we  know  that  such  ideals 
exist,  and  we  can  do  our  best  to  make  them  real  as  well  as  ideal.  The  Uni- 
versity of  California  is  not  only  an  institution  of  learning,  it  is  not  only  a 
place  of  education  for  the  children  of  the  State ;  it  is  the  place  where  the 
Spirit  of  California  should  be  most  steadily  cultivated  and  where  the  genera- 
tions to  come  after  us  should  learn  the  breadth  of  thought,  the  love  of  beauty, 
and  the  kindliness  of  courage,  which  have  been  characteristic  of  Californians 
in  the  past  and  must  be  characteristic  of  Californians  of  the  future. 

Henry  Morse  Stephens. 


23 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


Student  Citizenship 

ITH  the  growth  of  colleges  has  come  an  increased  meaning  of 
student  life.  The  period  at  a  university,  according  to  the  old  con- 
ception, was  regarded  not  as  a  part  of  real  life,  but  merely  as  a 
preparation  for  it.  We  still  use  the  name  "Commencement  Day," 
but  the  general  idea  which  gave  it  currency  has  been  lost.  For  it 
seems  to  be  the  belief,  on  the  part  of  students  of  this  day  at  any  rate,  that  the  four 
college  years  are  just  as  truly  a  part  of  life  as  any  years  that  are  to  follow.  Our 
college  citizenship  is  real  and  genuine.  And  it  should  be  regarded,  not  merely  as 
a  means  of  preparation  for  something  which  is  to  follow,  but  as  a  period  of  experi- 
ence which  has  a  value  and  importance  in  itself. 

The  expression  that  the  University  is  a  miniature  world,  employed  so 
frequently  as  to  be  well  nigh  outworn,  has  for  us  taken  on  a  new  meaning,  for  we 
have  come  to  realize  that  we  are  in  truth  our  own  community,  that  our  problems 
are  in  a  sense  just  as  real,  and  our  relations  just  as  vital  as  those  of  the  outside 
world.  The  main  difference  is  that  here  they  are  more  limited  and,  by  the  nature 
of  things,  are  only  temporary.  Here,  as  in  other  relations  of  life,  there  are  two 
sorts  of  activity,  the  working  for  oneself  and  the  working  for  the  community. 

The  one  is  individual,  the  other  social. 

It  is  with  the  latter,  with  the  principles  of  association,  upon  which  the  under- 
graduate life  of  the  University  has  been  organized,  that  this  article  is  concerned. 
The  purpose  here  is  to  set  forth  the  civic  import  of  Student  Self-government. 

At  California,  by  the  grace  of  University  authority,  we  have  developed 
our  peculiar  form  of  student  government.  To  a  wide  extent  we  have  been 
entrusted  with  the  conduct  of  our  extra-academic  affairs.  Our  equally  wide 
acceptance  of  such  responsibilities  has  surrounded  us  with  something  akin  to  a 


24 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


complex  governmental  system.  We  have  the 
necessary  framework  of  government  in  our 
A.  S.  U.  C,  with  agencies  more  or  less  adap- 
ted to  register  the  steady  current  of  public 
opinion.  And  we  have  the  forces  which  make 
public  opinion  in  our  Daily  Calif  ornian,  Senior 
Singing,  honor  societies  and  various  other  or- 
ganizations. 

Thus  there  is  the  formal  side  of  student 
government,  calculated  to  assure,  through  cen- 
tralization in  an  executive  committee  and  a 
Graduate  Manager,  efficient  settlement  of 
questions  which  are  largely  administrative  or 
financial.  The  executive  committee  is  vested 
with  sufficient  power  to  regulate  the  course 
of  all  so-called  "student  activities." 

In  addition  there  is  the  less  clearly  defined, 
but  more  essential,  part  of  our  student  gov- 
ernment. 

With  such  questions  as  the  Honor  Spirit 
in  examinations,  and  the  other  issues  to  which 
the  Student  Affairs  and  Welfare  committees 
can  be  no  development  along  arbitrary  or  fixed 


HARVARD — THE  YARD 


YALE PHELPS    HALL 

have  addressed  themselves,  there 
lines.  It  is  here  that  the  attitude 
of  mind  on  the  part  of  the 
individual  is  the  determining 
factor.  This  application  of 
the  standards  which  have 
been  growing  steadily  in  the 
student  body  is  largely  the 
result  of  what  we  know  as 
"Senior  Control."  At  best 
this  is  an  intangible  thing; 
but  it  is  none  the  less  impor- 
tant, because  it  is  difficult  to 
apply.  The  building  up  of 
the  spirit  which  has  been  fos- 
tered through  this  agency  is 
a  true  application  of  the  "con- 
sent of  the  governed."     It  re- 


25 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


WISCONSIN — UNIVERSITY   HALL 


suits  from  the  growth  of  a  campus-wide  attitude  of  service  to  the  University, 
of  a  wholesome  public-spiritedness.  And  the  effectiveness  of  upper  class  adminis- 
tration lies  in  the  fact  that  it  comprises  guidance  rather  than  iron-bound  rule ;  that 
it  is  government  by  example  and  experience  rather  than  by  attempted  coercion. 
Happily,  the  fact  has  been  realized  that  Senior  Moderation  and  Senior  Example 
are  integral  parts  of  the  system  of  Senior  Control. 

The  conclusion  to  be  drawn,  then,  is  that  the  benefit  of  student  govern- 
ment, and  whatever  real  significance  it  possesses  as  an  experience  in  citizenship, 
we  find  in  the  development  of  a  sort  of  civic  sympathy.  Surely  it  is  such 
an  underlying  spirit  which  is  the  essential  thing  in  any  government  —  without 
which  the  most  ideal  constitution  is  mere  paper,  and  the  most  perfectly  devised 
institutions  will  prove  cumbersome.  The  actuating  ideal,  not  only  of  co-opera- 
tion and  of  mutual  confidence,  but  of  civic  interest  which  is  not  self-interest, 
this  mental  attitude  is  the  main  thing  we  gain  from  our  student  life,  and  in 
particular  from  our  student  government.  It  is  this  which  will  be  of  benefit 
to  us  and  to  the  State. 

Newton  Bishop  Drury. 

26 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


__lv 


The  Individualism  of  California 

N  an  interesting  passage  of  his  autobiography,  Goethe  tells 
us  of  the  building  of  the  New  Theatre.  The  curtain  had  been 
painted  by  Oeser,  who  had  taken  the  muses  out  of  the  clouds, 
and  with  statues  of  Sophocles,  Aristophanes  and  other  dramatic 
writers,  adorned  the  vestibule  to  the  Temple  of  Fame.  Through 
the  open  center  a  man  in  a  light  jerkin,  without  troubling  himself  about  the 
distinguished  company  present,  was  proceeding  directly  up  to  the  temple. 
"Now  this  man,"  says  Goethe,  "was  to  represent  Shakespeare,  who,  without 
predecessors  or  followers,  without  concerning  himself  about  models,  went  to 
seek  immortality  in  his  own  way." 

By  some  such  figure  as  this,  Californians  are  wont  to  regard  themselves, 
their  great  State,  their  great  city  of  San  Francisco,  and  their  University. 
Without  troubling  thoughts  as  to  predecessors  or  followers,  with  slight 
regard  for  the  conventions  of  older  and  less  independent  civilizations,  con- 
fidently and  unabashed,  California  has  moved  to  meet  immortality  in  her  own 
way.  This  separation  from  outside  influence  and  freedom  from  outside  models 
— a  quality  born  of  the  intense  individualism  of  the  early  history  of  the 
State  and  of  its  isolation  from  the  rest  of  the  republic — gives  to  California 
and  to  the   University   of  California  a   striking  individuality. 

There  are  no  other  institutions  with  which  California  may  be  particu- 
larly compared.  This  does  not  mean,  however,  that  the  faith  and  quality 
of  other  centers  of  culture  and  instruction  have  not  been  built  into  her  fiber. 
California  arose  largely  through  the  efforts  of  men  who  were  graduates  of 
Harvard  and  of  Yale,  and  their  traditions  were  dominant  in  our  early  his- 


28 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


tory.  Soon  thereafter,  due 
to  the  calling-  here  of  men  of 
great  strength,  the  influence 
of  other  American  universi- 
ties came  to  be  felt,  among 
these  the  universities  of  Mich- 
igan, Cornell  and  Johns  Hop- 
kins. The  influence  of  Ger- 
man universities  upon  the 
lives  of  conspicuous  instruc- 
tors assisted,  too,  in  contribu- 
ting to  the  quality  of  our 
spirit.  Then,  at  a  critical 
time  there  arose  the  sister  in- 
stitution of  Leland  Stanford 
Junior  University,  whose  in- 
fluence upon  the  reinvigora- 
tion  of  this  institution  cannot 
be  measured,  and  whose  pres- 
ence as  a  neighboring  source 
of  light  and  teaching  has  com- 
pensated for  the  solitary  posi- 
tion which  California  previ- 
ously occupied. 

In  recent  years,  as  the  pur- 
pose of  the  University  has 
taken  on  a  larger  aim  of 
promoting  the  well-being  of 
every  interest  of  the  State, 
California  has  felt  the  exam- 
ple of  the  University  of  Wis- 
consin, which  stands  perhaps 
foremost  in  vital  connection 
between  university  life  and 
commonwealth  activities.  But 
the  example  set  in  this  regard 
by  Wisconsin  cannot  be  at- 
tained here  with  the  same  fa- 
cility, nor  possibly  by  the  same 
methods.  The  States  are  too 
dissimilar,  and  for  California 


\(;KI(  Tl.TCRAI.     HALI. 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


m*,.^* 

I 

"if* s   '  J  f 

if              i     •  .-as*  *v. 

- 

^..^^ 

:^»     -.-"li     ^ 

CORNELL — ON    THE    CAMPUS 


the  task  is  one  of  much  greater  magnitude  and  consequent  difficulty.  The 
great  size  of  California,  its  extraordinary  physical  variety,  embracing 
mountain,  valley  and  desert  counties,  and  a  population  whose  interests  are  dis- 
tributed between  mining, stock-raising, lumbering,  fruit-raising,  and  commerce, 
make  the  object  of  ministering  to  the  well-being  of  these  diverse  interests  a  pe- 
culiarly difficult  one.  The  population  of  California  is  singularly  heterogenous  in 
its  origin.  The  original  American  stock  not  only  came  from  the  north  and  the 
south,  but  to  its  citizenship  early  were  added  considerable  numbers  from  Great 
Britain  and  Ireland,  from  France,  Italy  and  other  Latin  countries.  It  is  the 
diversity  of  talent  represented  by  diversity  of  mental  type  which  has  given  the 

University  its  large  interest  in 
music,  dramatics,  art  and  lit- 
erary production. 

The  extraordinary  growth 
of  population  in  southern  Cali- 
fornia in  the  last  decade  adds 
a  new  problem  to  the  work  of 
the  University.  Nearly  half 
of  the  population  of  southern 
California  are  recent  settlers 
in  the  State,  unfamiliar  with 
its  history  and  as  yet  unaffec- 
ted by  the  strong  spirit  which 
tends  to  unite  all  sections  of 


*? 


*LJfoA' 


i  i  i  1 1  - 


30 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 

the  commonwealth.  The  Uni- 
versity of  California  is  not 
sufficiently  well  known  to 
them,  nor  appraised  at  its  true 
value,  and  perhaps  the  most 
serious  effort  before  our  in- 
stitution at  the  present  time 
is  to  make  its  influence  strong- 
er in  the  southern  counties  of 
the  State. 

One  of  the  most  valuable 
qualities  of  the  University,  I 
am  pleased  to  think,  is  its 
spirit  of  generosity  and  toler- 
ation. Our  University  is  singularly  free  from  the  spirit  of  bigotry  and  ungener- 
ous depreciation.  Students  of  all  classes  and  many  races  mingle  here  in  a  fellow- 
ship which  is  growing  steadily  more  intellectual  and  more  helpful.  This  may  be 
equally  said  of  many  universities  of  America.  Cornell  has  a  student  body  that  is 
remarkably  cosmopolitan.  But  perhaps  no  institution  in  the  country  has  an  equal 
opportunity  with  our  own  to  make  its  influence  felt  upon  the  countries  of  the 
Pacific. 

I  wish  the  same  could  be  said  of  the  present  influence  of  the  University  upon 
countries  of  Spanish  America.  The  appropriateness  of  close  relations  between 
ourselves  and  Spanish  American  countries  and  educational  conditions  is  evident. 
It  found  notable  recognition  in  the  invitation  of  the  Mexican  Republic  to  the 
President  of  this  institution  to  take  part  in  the  centennial  celebration  of  Mexican 
independence  a  year  ago.  But  in  spite  of  the  fact  that  California  is  an  old 
Spanish  colony  and  has  many  descendents  of  Spanish  pioneers  among  its  citizen- 
ship, and  that  our  equipment  for  the  study  of  Spanish-American  history  is  un- 
rivaled, we  have  as  yet  attracted  small  numbers  from  Spanish  American  countries. 
President  Madero  of  Mexico  and  his  brother  were  students  here  in  1892-3,  but 
not  long  enough  to  receive  a  deep  impression  from  our  life.  I  believe  that  eight 
of  the  ten  cabinet  advisors  of  President  Madero  have  received  an  English  educa- 
tion, but  the  disposition  in  Spanish  America  is  to  go  to  institutions  of  the  Middle 
West  and  of  the  East  rather  than  come  here. 

Finally,  no  institution  exerts  a  stronger  influence  upon  the  leadership  within 
its  own  State  than  our  own.  Graduates  of  Eastern  institutions,  coming  from 
all  parts  of  the  country  and  returning"  to  their  native  States,  contribute  relatively 
little  in  proportion  to  their  numbers  to  the  life  of  their  common  wealth  in  which 


31 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 

their  alma  mater  is  situated.  This  is  not  true  of  California.  The  great  bulk  of 
her  graduates  have  their  homes  in  this  State  or  on  the  Coast,  take  up  their  resi- 
dence here  and  rapidly  attain  a  position  of  influence  and  leadership  to  which  their 
education  fits  them.  Gradually  in  this  way  there  is  being  built  up  through  the 
alumni  a  very  close  relationship  between  the  University  and  the  public  and  private 
activities  of  the  State.  It  is  perhaps  the  most  encouraging  tendency  manifested 
in  the  progress  of  our  institution. 

There  is  a  decided  disposition  in  California,  especially  in  the  southern  coun- 
ties, for  people  of  means  to  send  their  sons  and  daughters  to  Eastern  institutions 
whose  reputation,  they  imagine,  may  contribute  more  to  the  academic  degree 
attained  than  the  degree  of  this  University.  But  there  is  a  consideration  which 
should  not  be  lost  sight  of,  and  it  is  that  the  student  who  graduates  from  the 
University  of  California  graduates  as  a  member  of  a  compact  class,  and  has 
hundreds  of  acquaintances  and  friendships  already  formed  among  the  future 
leadership  of  the  State.  He  is  one  of  a  body  whose  attention  is  already  fixed 
upon  the  needs  and  problems  of  the  State.  This  is  an  experience  and  a  prepara- 
tion which  few  young  men  and  women  who  intend  to  unite  their  future  with  the 

future  of  California  can  afford  to  forego.  „  i-»    n 

David  P.   Barrows. 


THE    DOE    LIBRARY 


32 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


Student  Life  at  Oxford  University 

IX  companies  of  Rhodes  scholars,  each  representing"  virtually  every 
State  and  Territory  of  the  Union,  have  now  been  sent  to  Oxford 
University ;  four  of  them  are  already  returned  after  the  allotted 
three  years'  residence.  Americans,  and  more  particularly  American 
college  men,  are  expressing  an  interest  hitherto  unknown  in  student 
life  at  Oxford.  The  American  matriculating  at  the  English  university  enters  an 
environment  utterly  new.  If  he  is  an  uncompromising  apostle  of  extreme  Ameri- 
canism, he  may  find  congenial  companions  at  the  American  Club  with  whom  to 
associate  during  terms  and  travel  in  vacations ;  but  he  will  return  to  America 
unacquainted  with  English  students  and  with  English  student  life.  If,  on  the 
other  hand,  he  is  ready  to  participate  with  zest  in  the  activities  and  interests  of 
the  English  undergraduate,  the  members  of  his  college  will  receive  him  with  cor- 
diality as  sincere,  if  not  as  outspoken,  as  that  to  which  he  has  been  accustomed 
at  home,  and  the  doors  of  opportunity  in  the  athletic,  social  and  intellectual  life 
•of  Oxford  will  be  thrown  wide  open  to  him. 

Michaelmas  term  opens  about  the  middle  of  October  and  lasts  eight  weeks. 
There  are  six  weeks  vacation  at  Christmas  and  at  Easter,  with  Hilary  and  the 
continuous  Easter  and  Trinity  terms  intervening,  and  then  comes  the  long  summer 
vacation.  The  emphasis  on  the  vacations  is  not  undue,  they  are  the  genuine 
working  periods  of  the  Oxford  student.  He  must  take  "collections,"  as  the 
•college  examinations  are  called,  when  he  "comes  up"  to  Oxford  at  the  beginning 
of  term,  not  at  the  end  before  he  "goes  down."  During  term  he  attends  lectures, 
as  may  seem  good  to  him  and  his  tutor,  works  steadily,  if  he  is  an  honors  man, 
but  not  overmuch,  and  lays  out  a  severe  program  of  study  for  the  approaching 
vacation.      Residence  at  Oxford,   save   for  the  year  immediately  preceding  the 

33 


'TOM  S  '   TOWER,  NEW  COLLEGE,  OXFORD 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


"schools"  or  final  examina- 
tions for  the  degree,  is  the 
season  of  respite  from  close 
application  to  the  curriculum. 
It  is,  however,  very  decidedly 
not  a  period  of  idleness ;  the 
activities  at  Oxford  are  infin- 
ite in  number  and  variety. 
The  editor  of  the  Blue  and 
Gold  asks  for  some  account 
of  this  student  life  at  Oxford, 
more  particularly  at  points  of 
contrast  with  the  life  here. 
It  is  mostly  contrast. 

Students  live  during  the 
first  two  years  at  least  in  one 
of  the  twenty-one  colleges 
that  make  up  the  university. 
The  college,  with  its  separate 
group  of  buildings,  gardens 
and  athletic  fields,  is  a  house- 
hold that  commands  in  ex- 
traordinary degree  the  affec- 
tion and  loyalty  of  its  mem- 
bers. The  head  of  the  col- 
lege (variously  styled  Master, 

President,  Warden)  and  many  of  the  fellows  or  "dons''  reside  like  the  students 
within  the  college  gates.  Every  student  has  a  study  and  bedroom.  They  break- 
fast in  their  rooms,  but  seldom  alone,  for  eight  o'clock  is  emphatically  a  social 
hour,  and  the  men  linger  round  the  table  in  groups  to  discuss  the  parliamentary 
debates  of  the  day  before  or  the  probable  outcome  of  an  approaching  political 
election  until  nine  or  ten  o'clock,  when  lectures  begin.  Lunch  is  meager,  in  view 
of  the  boating,  football  or  hockey  that  follow  immediately  in  the  early  afternoon. 
There  are  no  gymnasiums,  but  every  student  plays  some  game.  The  colleges 
vary  in  membership  from  forty  to  three  hundred  men,  but  even  the  smaller  col- 
leges have  teams  in  six  or  seven  different  sports.  The  streets  of  Oxford  are 
crowded  every  afternoon  with  students  in  athletic  attire  trotting  to  the  fields  or 
the  oval  or  the  river.  Lightness  of  lunch  followed  by  hard  exercise  account  for 
the  alacrity  with  which  the  students  hurry  back  to  "tea,"  which  implies  hot  buttered 


A   PULPIT  —  RELIC  OF  OLD  OXFORD 


35 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 


buns,  muffins,  crumpets  and 
cake  as  well  as  tea,  strictly  so 
called ;  and  tea  in  this  inclu- 
sive sense  accounts  in  turn  tor 
the  lateness  of  the  dinner 
hour,  which  may  be  seven  or 
seven-thirty  o'clock.  Tea  like 
breakfast  is  a  social  hour  in 
the  students'  rooms.  The  in- 
terim from  five  to  seven  is  a 
time  for  reading  and  study. 
Dinner  is  served  in  the  college 
hall  at  long  tables,  crossed  by 
the  "high  table"  where  the 
master  and  tutors  dine. 

The  societies  meet  in  the 
evenings.  There  are  literary, 
historical,  philosophical  and 
political  societies  in  each  of 
the  colleges,  as  well  as  larger 
intercollegiate  groups.  These 
meetings  afford  the  English 
student  ample  opportunity  to 
indulge  his  fondness  for  pub- 
lic speaking.    Public  speaking 

A    GLIMPSE    OF    THE       HIGH,      OXFORDS    FAMOUS  r.      -        ft  t  & 

thoroughfare  in    an    English    university    is 

not  confined,  as  it  tends  to  be  here,  to  formal  debate  on  the  part  of  teams 
long  and  laboriously  trained  for  forensic  combat.  Men  speak  often  and 
readily  and  with  more  lightness  of  touch  than  we  do.  They  are  not  afraid 
to  tell  a  story  occasionally;  they  even  dare  to  speak  in  epigrams  or  try  jokes, 
and  they  are  frequently  known  to  begin  formal  debates  without  stating  in 
introduction  that  they  are  going  to  prove  "the  following  four  points."  They 
are  not  weighed  down  by  the  awful  responsibility  of  capturing  that  decision  by 
dry  and  logical  presentation  of  a  case  to  the  judges  after  the  manner  of  lawyers 
arguing  from  a  brief ;  they  speak  to  the  audience  and  decisions  are  awarded 
by  vote  of  their  hearers.  Limericks  were  just  coming  into  vogue  when  I 
first  heard  a  debate  in  the  Oxford  Union,  and  the  speeches  sparkled  with 
good  lines,  in  which  cabinet  ministers  figured  delightfully.  Debating  does 
not  imply  solemnity.     The  smaller  college  societies  meet  in  the  rooms  of  stu- 


36 


THE  UNIVERSITY  AND  THE  STATE 

dents  or  tutors.  Refreshments  are  served  in  the  course  of  the  evening. 
Papers  or  addresses  are  followed  by  general  and  lively  discussion.  Writers 
and  members  of  Parliament  frequently  come  to  Oxford  to  participate  in  the 
larger  gatherings.  I  recall  hearing  G.  K.  Chesterton,  H.  G.  Wells  and 
Bernard  Shaw  at  college  societies,  and  Winston  Churchill,  Secretary  Master- 
man  and  Bonar  Law,  now  leader  of  the  Opposition,  at  the  Oxford  Union. 
Even  athletes  are  expected  to  be  speakers  in  England.  There  are  few  large 
public  meetings  in  the  college  town  to  which  the  president  of  the  boat  club, 
who  is  to  Oxford  what  the  captain  of  the  football  team  is  to  California,  is 
not  invited  and  called  on  for  a  brief  speech.  Opposing  athletic  teams  regular- 
Jy  meet  to  banquet  together  on  the  evening  of  the  game,  and  after  dinner 
speeches  are  a  regular  part  of  the  program.  This  custom  apparently  persists  in 
the  colonies.  Coach  James  Schaeffer  relates  that  he  was  everywhere  pestered  for 
speeches  on  the  Australian  football  tour. 

The  happiest  time  of  the  year  at  Oxford  is  May  Week,  when  the  college 
eights  race  daily  and  the  old  town  is  crowded  with  visitors.  Each  college 
puts  at  least  one  eight  on  the  river,  some  of  them  two  or  three.  The  races 
occur  in  three  divisions,  at  two,  four  and  six  o'clock.  A  boat's  length  separates 
the  crews  at  the  start,  the  place  of  each  college  being  that  at  which  it  con- 
cluded the  preceding  year.  These  are  "bumping  races."  The  aim  is  to  drive 
the  prow  against  the  stroke  oar  or  rudder  of  the  boat  ahead.  A  bump  puts 
the  successful  crew  one  place  higher  up  for  the  next  day.  College  students 
armed  with  pistols  and  megaphones  run  along  the  tow-path  abreast  of  their 
respective  colleges,  and  other  partisans  shout  encouragement  to  their  favorite 
crews  from  the  colleges'  barges  that  fringe  the  opposite  shore.  Between 
races  the  Isis  and  Cherwell  are  alive  with  punts  and  canoes.  Advance  of 
five  places  within  the  week  guarantees  a  college  a  "bump  supper,"  a  cele- 
bration not  easy  to  earn  but  worth  many  years  of  waiting.  The  greatest 
glory  that  a  college  can  enjoy  athletically  is  to  have  its  crew  "head  of  the 
river." 

Student  journalism  is  backward  at  Oxford.  There  are  two  weekly  publi- 
cations— the  Isis  and  the  Varsity — but  no  daily  paper  and  no  annual.  The  general 
conception  of  the  annual  as  a  vivid  record  of  the  college  year  is  new  to  the  English 
student. 

Farnham  P.  Griffiths. 


37 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 


PRESIDENT  S    HOUSE 


College  of  Letters 

HEX  the  College  of  California  gave  up  its  life  and  all  its  property 
to  the  new  university  in  1868,  a  solemn  covenant  was  made  between 
the  Trustees,  the  State  of  California  and  the  Regents  of  the  new 
University  that  there  should  forever  be  maintained  at  Berkeley 
not  only  colleges  of  engineering  and  agriculture,  but  also  "an  aca- 
demical college  of  the  same  grade  and  with  courses  of  instruction  equal  to  those 
of  Eastern  colleges."  At  that  time  courses  in  Greek  and  Latin  were  always 
required  in  the  colleges  of  the  East  for  the  degree  of  Bachelor  of  Arts ;  and  the 
Regents  of  the  University,  with  the  scrupulous  care  with  which  they  have  always 
administered  the  trusts  confided  to  them,  have  declined  to  follow  the  example  of 
most  universities  in  granting  the  degree  of  Bachelor  of  Arts  at  the  end  of  any 
four  years'  course  that  is  not  strictly  professional.  Every  person  who  has  ever 
received  the  degree  of  A.  B.  in  the  University  of  California  has  studied  Greek 
and  Latin,  and  also  the  other  literary  and  philosophical  subjects  that  formerly 
everywhere  were  considered  indispensable  to  a  liberal  education.  The  College  of 
Letters  is  thus  the  oldest  college  in  the  University,  and  by  law  is  a  continuation  of 
the  old  college  of  California  which  was  established  in  i860.  The  College  of  Cali- 
fornia was  organized  by  Yale  graduates  and  patterned  after  Yale :  and  Yale  fol- 
lowed closely  the  English  universities,  particularly  Cambridge ;  and  Cambridge 
goes  back  to  the  revival  of  learning  in  Europe.     Thus  the  College  of  Letters  pre- 


40 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 

serves  the  tradition  of  the  old  liberal  culture,  and  in  the  progress  of  years  has 

also  admitted  the  modern  subjects  with  which  a  liberally  educated  citizen  of  the 

twentieth  century  should  be  familiar.    So  long  as  the  University  exists,  the  College 

of  Letters  will  stand  for  general  culture  and  the  art  of  living,  rather  than  for 

immediate  preparation   for  vocational  careers,  however  necessary  and   desirable 

the  latter  may  be  in  a  modern  university.  ,,,  A    ,  T 

\\  iu.iam  A.  Merrill. 

College  of  Social  Sciences 

The  College  of  Social  Sciences  is  the  center  of  the  group  of  Colleges  of 
General  Culture.  It  originated  as  a  branch  of  the  College  of  Letters,  but  was 
organized  separately  in  1893.  This  college  offers  perhaps  the  broadest  basis  of 
culture  for  an  unprofessional  career,  while  at  the  same  time  it  may  include  funda- 
mental training  toward  later  specialization,  as  it  partakes  somewhat  of  both  the 
College  of  Letters  and  the  College  of  Natural  Sciences.  Its  popularity  is  marked 
by  the  increasingly  large  enrollment,  which  for  some  years  has  exceeded  that  in 
any  other  college.     Graduates  from  the  College  of  Social  Sciences  receive  the 

degree  of  Bachelor  of  Letters. 

Lucy  Stebrins. 

College  of  Natural  Sciences 

The  College  of  Natural  Sciences  as  established  in  1892  was  one  of  the  three 
colleges  of  general  culture,  each  of  which  stood  for  a  definite  ideal.  The  dis- 
tinctive purpose  of  the  College  of  Natural  Sciences  was  then  conceived  to  be, 
the  training  of  its  students  to  tell  the  exact  truth  about  the  natural  phenomena  of 
the  material  world.  Graduates  receiving  from  the  University  the  hallmark. 
Bachelor  of  Science,  were  expected  to  possess  acuteness  of  perception,  to  have 
judicial  minds,  reserving  decision  until  all  facts  and  conditions  were  known,  and 
to  have  active  and  vivid  imaginations,  capable  of  forming  quickly  new  combina- 
tions of  the  factors  of  a  problem,  and  following  the  resulting  train  of  events. 

Recent  changes  in  the  schedule  of  admission  requirements  for  the  various 
colleges  and  in  the  liberty  of  choice  of  major  work  in  each  college,  seem  to  threaten 
the  continued  existence  of  the  clearly  differentiated  culture  colleges.  The  problem 
now  pressing  for  consideration  is  whether  the  original  conception  of  the  value  of 
the  segregation  of  the  work  of  this  college,  and  the  conferring  of  its  special  degree, 
is  so  vital  that  the  College  of  Natural  Sciences  shall  hold  to  its  old  ideal,  or 
whether  there  is  an  essential  unity  in  the  aims  and  the  training  of  the  culture  col- 
leges which  is  tending  toward  practical  verification.  „  _,    TT 

te  K  RULIFF  S.   HOLWAY. 

41 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 
College  of  Commerce 

Another  uneventful  but  successful  year  has  been  passed  by  the  College  of 
Commerce.  Since  the  establishment  of  this  College  there  has  been  a  gratifying 
growth,  not  only  in  the  actual  number  of  students,  but  also  in  the  percentage  of 
all  undergraduates  enrolled  therein.  In  1900  only  two  per  cent  of  the  under- 
graduates were  in  the  College  of  Commerce ;  in  1904  five  per  cent,  in  1906  six 
per  cent,  in  1908  seven  per  cent,  in  191 1  seven  and  eight-tenths  per  cent.  It  is 
pleasing  to  note  that  this  growth  is  not  due  to  any  lowering  of  standards,  for  the 
requirements  are  still  exceptionally  high,  both  as  to  the  number  of  units  necessary 
for  graduation,  and  as  to  the  amount  of  mathematics  and  foreign  languages 
specifically  prescribed.  Indeed,  coincident  with  the  growth  of  numbers  there 
has  been  an  improvement  in  the  standard  of  scholarship.  As  an  indication  of 
this  may  be  mentioned  that  three  of  the  eighteen  elected  to  Phi  Beta  Kappa  from 
the  present  Senior  Class  are  members  of  the  College  of  Commerce. 

Henry  Rand  Hatfield. 

College  of  Agriculture 

The  great  event  of  the  year  in  the  agricultural  activities  of  the  University  is 
the  completion  of  the  new  Agriculture  Hall  —  one  of  the  permanent  buildings 
of  the  University,  constructed  of  steel,  concrete  and  granite  at  a  cost  of  about 
$220,000,  wholly  apart  from  the  expenditure  required  for  interior  fittings,  furni- 
ture and  equipment.  This  new  building  will  contain  administrative  offices,  library, 
document  and  mailing  rooms,  etc.,  of  the  Agricultural  Department  and  will  provide 
also  lecture  and  class  rooms,  offices  and  spacious  laboratories  for  four  or  five 
subdivisions  of  the  department  dealing  with  closely  related  subjects.  These  sub- 
divisions have  been  working  at  great  disadvantage  for  years  in  the  various  dis- 
connected places  which  could  be  found  for  them  upon  the  campus.  The  occupa- 
tion of  the  new  building  will  allow  needed  expansion  of  several  subdivisions, 
which  will  continue  their  work  in  the  old  agricultural  building  until  they  can  be 
installed  in  other  new  buildings  of  the  agricultural  group,  which  will  be  con- 
structed as  funds  become  available. 

Other  indications  of  the  growth  of  the  College  of  Agriculture  are  found  in 
the  registration  of  144  new  students  in  the  Berkeley  departments  of  the  College 
during  the  first  half  of  the  current  year,  a  greater  number  than  ever  before ;  in 
the  erection  of  several  new  buildings  on  the  University  Farm  and  large  additions 
to  instructional  equipment,  especially  in  purchase  of  fine  animals  representative  of 
the  different  breeds  of  live  stock.  This  growth  is  also  to  be  noted  in  the  enlarge- 
ment of  the  Plant  Disease  Laboratory  at  Whittier,  the  erection  of  a  new  building 

42 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 


THE  CENTER  OF  THINGS 


at  the  Citrus  Experiment  Station  at  Riverside,  the  establishment  of  a  new  sub- 
station and  the  erection  of  suitable  buildings  in  Imperial  Valley  upon  valuable  land 
donated  to  the  University  by  Imperial  County ;  the  increase  of  research  work  upon 
the  Kearney  Estate  at  Fresno,  etc.  The  Agricultural  Department  is  receiving 
the  most  interested  and  generous  attention  from  the  administration  of  the  Uni- 
versity in  its  effort  to  meet  the  great  popular  demand  for  service  to  the  leading 

industry  of  the  State.  _,    T   .17. 

J  E.  J.  WlCKSON. 

College  of  Chemistry 

The  College  of  Chemistry  was  founded  in  1871,  incorporated  in  the  Political 
Code  of  California  and  adopted  March  12,  1872.  This  was  subsequent  to  the 
establishment  of  the  Colleges  of  Agriculture,  Civil  Engineering,  Mining  and 
Mechanics.     The  University  was  then  in  Oakland. 

Prof.  Willard  B.  Rising,  who  had  been  instructor  in  the  University  of 
Michigan,  was  appointed  Professor  of  Chemistry,  and  spent  some  time  in  Europe, 
studying  the  subject  of  laboratories,  and  came  to  Berkeley  and  immediately  took 
up  the  task  of  equipping  the  laboratory  and  organizing  a  course  of  instruction. 
About  half  of  South  Hall  was  devoted  to  this  purpose,  and  a  very  complete  plant 
was  installed. 

The  classes  grew  until  the  quarters  in  South  Hall  became  too  small  for  their 
accommodation.    In  1890  a  new  Chemistry  Building  was  erected,  and  the  depart- 

43 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 


SOUTH    HALL 


merit  took  up  its  new  quarters  in  this  structure  in  1891.  At  this  time  there  was 
ampk  room  for  the  number  of  students  then  in  attendance,  but  the  department, 
in  common  with  the  rest  of  the  University,  has  grown  so  fast  that  in  spite  of  sev- 
eral additions  which  were  made  at  different  times,  the  quarters  are  now  far  too 
small.  Provisions  have  been  made  to  take  care  of  some  of  the  overflow  by  the 
erection  of  a  new  lecture  room,  but  a  new  and  modern  laboratory  is  imperative  in 
the  future.  Plans  are  being  drawn  for  such  a  laboratory.  At  the  present  time 
over  2,200  students  are  taking  various  courses  in  chemistry.  The  laboratories 
were  built  to  accommodate  no  more  than  500  comfortably,  so  the  need  of  a  new 

building  is  very  evident.  „  ,_,.T 

J  Edmoxd  O  Neill. 

College  of  Mechanics 

The  work  of  the  College  of  Mechanics  is  closely  identified  with  the  interests 
of  the  State.  Not  only  are  many  of  the  graduates  of  this  college  now  in  responsi- 
ble relation  to  the  important  engineering  problems  of  the  entire  Pacific  Coast,  but 
the  courses  of  instruction  are  to  a  great  degree  directed  toward  these  develop- 
ments of  the  resources  of  the  State. 

Broadly  grouped,  the  curriculum  of  the  college  covers  instruction  in  hydrau- 
lics, steam  engineering  and  electrical  engineering.  Beginning  in  January  of  this 
year,  a  complete  and  comprehensive  course  in  gas  engineering  has  been  added, 
and  the  facilities  for  such  work  will  include  for  the  coming  year  a  well-equipped 

44 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 

laboratory  for  experimental  work  in  the  manufacture  and  distribution  of  gas  for 
all  purposes,  including  the  generation  of  power  with  gas  and  oil  engines. 

The  University  is  indebted  to  the  Pacific  Coast  Gas  Association,  one  of  the 
prominent  members  of  which  is  Regent  John  A.  Britton,  for  its  most  generous 
gift  which  has  made  possible  this  most  important  addition  to  the  work  of  the 
College  of  Mechanics. 

To  the  consistent  generous  treatment  of  the  college  by  the  University  must 
be  added  the  gifts  of  private  individuals  and  organizations,  such  as  Clarence 
Mackay  and  his  mother,  Mrs.  John  W.  Mackay,  Mrs.  Hollidie,  wife  of  one  of  the 
best  friends  the  college  has  ever  had,  the  late  Regent  Hollidie,  and  many  other 
loyal  and  helpful  citizens  of  the  State. 

With  the  bountiful  provision  made  for  our  work,  it  is  at  once  with  a  great 
responsibility  and  a  great  pleasure  the  duty  of  the  members  of  the  department  and 
the  students  of  the  college  to  loyally  and  cheerfully  make  the  greatest  use  of  the 
engineering  opportunities  which  have  been  so  generously  granted  to  us. 

C.  L.  Cory. 

College  of  Civil  Engineering 

The  College  of  Civil  Engineering  aims  to  present  its  special  fields  of  study 
with  the  broadest  viewpoint.  Thus,  we  emphasize  schedules  which  specialize  in 
structural  engineering,  sanitary  engineering,  railway  work  and  irrigation.  But 
these  four  groups  of  specified  engineering  aims  are  no  more  important  to  the 
student  than  the  earlier,  preparatory,  basic  subjects,  such  as  mathematics,  physics, 
chemistry,  drawing,  the  languages,  history  and  economics.  The  ambition  of  the 
college  is  to  increase  gradually  and  logically  the  requirements  for  matriculation 
and  graduation.  We  want  our  men  to  be  broad.  The  typical,  the  successful,  the 
ideal  engineer  of  the  future  must  be  a  constructor,  an  economist,  a  business  man, 
a  scholar  and  a  gentleman. 

The  last  ten  years  have  witnessed  great  growth  in  our  civil  engineering  inter- 
ests. A  department  of  irrigation  has  been  firmly  established.  Courses  in  forestry 
and  public  health  service  are  being  planned.  Sanitary  studies  form  a  definite  part 
of  the  curriculum.  Instructors  in  municipal  and  sanitary  engineering  are  co- 
operating with  the  medical  departments,  with  bacteriology,  with  animal  industry, 
and  hygiene.  They  are  directing  the  work  in  domestic  science.  Professors  of 
sanitation  and  irrigation  are  vitally  concerned  with  the  practical  agricultural 
school  at  Davis.  They  are  co-operating  with  Pacific  Coast  cities,  counties,  and 
with  the  State  to  develop  further  a  sane  public  opinion  regarding  water  supply, 
sewerage,  and  other  health  problems.  Our  structural  departments  are  associated 
with   architecture   no   less   than   with   engineering.      Surveying   courses    lead    to 

45 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 


HEARST  S    MINING   BUILDING 


instruction  in  geodesy  through  which  channel  our  engineers  are  brought  in  contact 
with  the  Department  of  Astronomy.  Through  railroad  work  we  touch  upon 
economics.  By  the  writing  of  contracts  and  specifications  we  lean  upon  the  law. 
In  the  design  of  buildings  we  become  interested  in  fireproof  construction,  fire 
protection  and  prevention,  and  are  led  to  commune  with  the  departments  of  eco- 
nomics and  insurance.  All  of  these  relationships  now  exist,  are  daily  developing 
and  bringing  civil  engineering  into  closer  sympathy  and  bond   with  the   whole 

University.  ^  „  , 

Charles  Derleth,  Jr. 

College  of  Mines 

During  the  last  year  over  ten  thousand  dollars  has  been  spent  in  the  equip- 
ment of  the  Hearst  Mining  Building.  Since  the  completion  of  the  building, 
over  seventy  thousand  dollars  has  been  spent  in  its  equipment.  Of  this  sum,  Mrs. 
Hearst  has  already  expended  nearly  fifty  thousand  dollars.  Over  ten  thousand 
dollars  of  the  remaining  has  been  due  to  gifts  from  a  large  number  of  manufac- 
turers of  mining  machinery.  Among  these  are :  Laidlaw-Dunn-Gordon  Co.,  of 
Cincinnati ;  Joshua  Hendy  Machine  Works  of  San  Francisco ;  The  Whifley 
Concentrator  Co. ;  The  Lehner  Water  Hammer  Drill  Co. ;  Murphy  Air  Hammer 
Drill  Co. ;  Shaw  Air  Hammer  Drill  Co. ;  The  Ingersoll  Eclipse  and  Rand 
Company. 

46 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 

During  the  recent  visit  of  the  American  Institute  of  Mining  Engineers,  Mr. 
Saunders,  President  of  the  Ingersoll  Sargent  Drill  Co.,  expressed  himself  thor- 
oughly pleased  with  the  arrangements  made  in  the  Hearst  Mining  Building  for 
the  testing  of  rock  drills.  He  said  that  the  arrangements  made  there  were  better 
than  he  had  seen  in  any  mine.  He  has  ordered  a  number  of  the  latest  forms  of 
rock  drills  manufactured  by  his  company  to  be  sent  to  the  building  as  a  gift. 

The  mining  students  have  greatly  benefited  by  the  removal  of  the  Geology 
Department  to  their  new  quarters  in  Bacon  Hall  during  the  present  year.  This 
has  greatly  added  to  the  facilities  of  that  department  for  the  instruction  of  mining 
students  in  geology. 

The  development  of  the  oil  fields  of  California  has  caused  a  considerable 
demand  for  mining  graduates  who  can  be  useful  in  that  line,  and  special  attention 
is  being  given  to  arranging  courses  along  these  lines  in  the  departments  of  mining, 
chemistry  and  geology,  all  of  which  will  be  available  to  mining  students. 

S.  B.  Christy. 
California  School  of  Design 

The  California  School  of  Design  was  established  in  1874  by  the  San  Francisco 
Art  Association.  In  1893  the  Association  became  the  occupant  of  the  buildings 
and  grounds  on  the  corner  of  California  and  Mason  Streets,  thereafter  known  as 
the  Mark  Hopkins  Institute  of  Art,  and  at  the  same  time  became  affiliated  with 
the  University.  After  the  great  fire  in  1906,  in  which  the  Art  Institute,  museum 
and  school  buildings,  were  destroyed,  another  building  of  a  temporary  character 
was  erected  on  the  same  site,  wherein  the  school  and  art  collections  of  the  Associ- 
ation have  since  been  housed,  under  the  title  of  the  San  Francisco  Institute  of  Art. 

Almost  from  the  outset  of  its  career  the  school  achieved  prominence,  and 
now  after  nearly  forty  years  it  is  recognized  both  at  home  and  abroad  as  one  of 
the  leading  art  schools  of  America.  A  University  Certificate  of  Proficiency  is 
awarded  to  students  completing  a  prescribed  course,  and  a  Normal  Certificate  to 
those  taking  the  teachers'  course.  A  medal  and  scholarship  is  awarded  each  year 
by  the  Julian  Academy  of  Paris,  and  the  Art  Association  also  awards  annually  six 
scholarships ;  the  Art  Students  League  of  New  York  awarded  two  scholarships, 
one  for  drawing  and  one  for  modeling,  to  the  school  during  the  past  year.  Exhibi- 
tions of  the  work  of  the  school  are  held  at  the  close  of  the  school  year. 

Robert  H.  Fletcher. 

College  of  Medicine 

Our  College  of  Medicine  began  as  a  private  institution,  established  in  1862 
by  the  late  Doctor  H.  H.  Toland,  and  known  as  Toland  Medical  College.     It  was 

47 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 


CALIFORNIA     HALL 


transferred  to  the  University  of  California  in  1873  as  an  unconditioned  gift.     The 

University's  resources  were  limited,  and  as  the  prevailing  University  ideals  did 

not  include   medicine  as   a   part   of  University   activities,   the   College   remained 

practically  an  affiliated  institution  until  the  beginning  of  the  administration  of 

President  Wheeler.     The  faculty  realized  that  for  its  proper  development  a  college 

of  medicine  must  be  closely  allied  to  the  academic  departments,  for  medicine  rests 

upon  physics,  chemistry  and  biology.      The  faculty  therefore  petitioned  the  Board 

of  Regents  to  take  complete  control,  changing  the  status  of  the  College  so  that 

it  would  have  the  same  relation  to  the  University  as  have  the  academic  branches. 

Under   this    enlightened    policy    supported    by    the    Board    of    Regents,    the 

President  and  the   faculty,  the   College  of   Medicine  has  become   an   institution 

scientific  in  its  methods,  devoted  to  the  best  University  ideals  and  surrounded 

by  University  atmosphere.  .      .    ^, , 

'.■«*■*  A.  A.  D  Ancona. 

College  of  Dentistry 

The  College  of  Dentistry  was  created  by  the  Regents  as  an  integral  part  of 
the  University  in  188 1.  It  was  originally  conducted  jointedly  with  the  Medical 
Department,  then  located  in  Toland  Hall,  in  San  Francisco.  The  rapid  growth 
of  the  College  made  it  necessary  to  seek  more  spacious  and  convenient  quarters 

48 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 

in  the  Donohoe  Building,  at  Market  and  Taylor  streets,  where  it  remained  until 
the  State  Legislature  generously  provided  a  permanent  home.  This  is  now 
the  most  easterly  building  of  the  group  of  Affiliated  Colleges. 

The  progress  of  dentistry  within  recent  years  has  been  very  rapid,  and 
it  has  always  been  the  aim  of  the  department  to  keep  abreast  of  the  demands. 
In  conformity  with  that  policy,  constant  improvements  and  additions  have  been 
and  are  being  made  to  both  the  equipments  and  curriculum. 


College  of  Pharmacy 

The  California  College  of  Pharmacy  was  organized  forty  years  ago  by  the 
California  Pharmaceutical  Society.  The  public-spirited  members  of  this  society 
realized  that  some  instruction  was  necessary  to  supplement  the  training  given 
to  young  men  studying  to  become  druggists  on  the  Pacific  Coast  under  the  old 
apprentice  system,  a  system  which  still  survives  in  part.  For  the  College  is 
but  an  aggregate  apprenticeship.  Thus  the  College  of  Pharmacy  came  into  life 
because  needed.  It  continues  to  live  because  it  still  furnishes  what  the  young 
druggists  want  and  what  the  older  druggists  approve. 

The  College  occupies  one  of  the  group  of  buildings  of  the  Affiliated  Colleges 

of  the  University  of  California,  on  Parnassus  Avenue  in  San  Francisco,  overlooking 

the  Park,  the  Golden  Gate  and  the  Pacific  Ocean.  „  _    -, 

Frank  S.  Greex. 

College  of  Law 

In  1878,  S.  C.  Hastings,  who  had  been  the  first  Chief  Justice  of  California, 
gave  to  the  State  $100,000,  on  condition  that  it  should  give  the  annual  interest 
thereon  of  seven  per  cent  to  the  maintenance  of  a  law  school.  On  this  founda- 
tion the  Hastings  College  of  the  Law  was  erected.  For  many  years  it  was  the 
only  law  school  in  the  State,  and  among  the  large  number  of  its  graduates  have 
been  found  many  of  the  prominent  judges,  lawyers,  and  public  men  of  California. 
The  curriculum  covers  three  years  and  leads  to  the  degree  of  Bachelor  of  Laws. 
The  requirement  for  admission  has  been  the  equivalent  of  high  school  graduation 
with  Latin.  In  1912  this  requirement  will  be  raised  to  the  equivalent  of  the  Junior 
certificate  in  the  University. 

The  department  of  jurisprudence  was  formally  organized  in  1894.  Prior  to 
that  time,  from  1882,  courses  had  been  given,  within  the  department  of  history, 
first  in  Roman  law,  and  then  in  constitutional  law,  in  the  theory  of  jurisprudence 
and  in  international  law.  These  were  assembled  together  under  the  new  depart- 
ment.   In  1896  a  first  year  in  professional  subjects  was  added,  and  in  1901  a  full 

49 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 


BOALT    HALL    OF    LAW 


three  years'  professional  curriculum  was  organized.  The  first  class  in  law  gradu- 
ated in  1903.  The  work  of  the  department  is  articulated  with  the  University  col- 
leges, so  that  a  student  may  take  his  first  year  of  law  as  a  University  Senior.  The 
second  and  third  years  may  only  be  pursued  as  strictly  graduate  work.  The  degree 
conferred  on  completion  of  the  course  is  Juris  Doctor. 

William  Carey  Jones. 


Lick  Observatory 

The  Lick  Observatory,  situated  on  the  summit  of  Mount  Hamilton,  in  Santa 
Clara  County,  California,  forty-two  hundred  feet  above  sea  level,  forms  a  research 
department  of  the  University  of  California.  The  observatory,  constructed  by  the 
James  Lick  Trust,  was  completed  early  in  1888.  On  June  1,  1888,  the  institution 
passed  to  the  control  of  the  President  and  Regents  of  the  University ;  and  from 
that  date  the  staff  of  astronomers  has  been  busily  engaged  in  pushing  forward 
the  boundaries  of  human  knowledge  concerning  the  celestial  bodies  which  sur- 
round us. 

Formal  instruction  is  not  provided  for  students,  but  a  few  graduate  students, 
who  are  qualified  to  serve  as  assistants  in  current  researches,  are  received  to  the 
extent  of  the  limited  living  accommodations  on  Mount  Hamilton.  Capable  stu- 
dents are  in  due  time  given  opportunities  to  prosecute  researches  on  their  own 
account,  and  in  many  cases  the  results  have  been  presented  as  theses  in  partial 

50 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 

fulfillment  of  requirements   for  the  degree  of  Doctor  of  Philosophy  from  the 
University.  W.  W.  Campbell. 

Department  of  University  Extension 

The  work  of  the  Department  of  University  Extension  was  carried  on  during 
the  year  1910  and  191 1  along  the  lines  laid  down  by  Prof.  H.  Morse  Stephens 
when  he  established  it  on  a  new  basis  in  California  in  1902.  Instruction  has  been 
given  entirely  by  the  lecture  method,  supplemented  by  collateral  reading  and  class 
work  in  conjunction  with  the  lectures.  There  has  been  no  instruction  by  corre- 
spondence or  lectures  requiring  any  illustrative  apparatus  other  than  the  stere- 
opticon.  In  spite  of  an  occasional  demand,  the  department  has  resisted  the  tempta- 
tion to  give  individual  lectures,  and  in  the  great  majority  of  cases,  the  lecture 
courses  have  been  based  upon  carefully  prepared  syllabuses.  The  personnel  of 
the  department  was  as  follows :  Acting  Director,  Prof.  Donald  E.  Smith.  Lec- 
turers, Ruliff  S.  Holway,  Richard  F.  Scholz,  Thomas  H.  Reed,  and  Benjamin  F. 
Kurtz. 

The  centers  where  the  courses  were  given  during  the  last  year  were  San 
Francisco,  Napa,  Sonora  and  Sacramento.  Don.  E.  Smith. 

Summer  Session,  1911 

The  Summer  Session  of  191 1,  with  its  enrollment  of  nineteen  hundred  and 
fifty  students, —  not  including  the  Summer  School  of  Surveying, —  was  the  largest 
in  the  history  of  the  University.  Upward  of  two  hundred  courses  were  given  by 
a  faculty  of  about  ninety  instructors.  Many  of  the  departments  and  courses  were 
new,  owing  to  the  increasing  demand  for  Summer  Session  work.  In  addition  to 
the  regular  University  instructors,  a  number  of  professors  and  teachers  from  other 
institutions  were  invited  to  strengthen  the  work  in  the  various  departments. 
Among  the  visiting  professors  who  attracted  the  largest  classes  were  Mr.  Arthur 
Foote,  Dr.  J.  Duncan  Spaeth,  and  Professor  George  Santayana. 

Throughout  the  entire  session  there  was  evinced  a  fine  enthusiasm  on  the  part 
of  both  faculty  and  students.  The  agreeable  summer  climate  of  Berkeley  was  a 
delight  and  surprise  to  the  Eastern  visitors.  And  the  well-known  hospitality  and 
co-operation  of  the  Berkeley  people  contributed  in  a  large  measure  to  the  success 
of  the  Summer  Session  of  191 1.  C.  H.  Rielen. 

Military  Department 

The  Department  of  Military  Science  and  Tactics  had  its  real  beginning  in 
1873  when  an  officer  of  the  United  States  Army  was  detailed  at  its  head,  since 

51 


COLLEGES  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 

which  time  it  has  not  only  been  subject  to  the  University  administration,  but 
also  under  the  fostering  care  of  the  Federal  Government,  which,  in  addition  to 
furnishing  an  officer  for  appointment  as  Professor  of  Military  Science  and 
Tactics,  also  provides  arms,  equipments  and  ammunition. 

COMMISSIONED  OFFICERS  AND   NON-COMMISSIONED   STAFF  OFFICERS 

UNIVERSITY  CADETS 

Captain  and  Adjutant W.    P.    Tufts 

Captain  and  Quartermaster R.    McHenry 

First  Lieutenant  and  Battalion  Adjutant,  First    Battalion H.   T.    Carlton 

First  Lieutenant  and  Battalion  Adjutant,  Second  Battalion F.   W.   Jacobs 

First  Lieutenant  and  Battalion  Adjutant,  Third   Battalion B.   D.   Dexter 

First  Lieutenant,  Inspector  of  Rifle  Practice R.  A.  Lee 

Sergeant  Major,  Regimental V.  C.  Gaines 

Commissary   Sergeant E.  J.   Sinclair 

Battalion  Sergeant  Major,  First    Battalion R.    W.   Coane 

Battalion  Sergeant  Major,  Second   Battalion T.   B.   Copeland 

Battalion  Sergeant  Major,  Third  Battalion J.  R.   Douglas 

Color   Sergeant O.    D.    Reager 

Color  Sergeant F.  F.  Lyons 

BAND 

Chief  Musician  (Captain) L.  W.  Allen 

Principal  Musician  (First  Lieutenant) C.  A.  Allen 

Drum  Major R.  G.  Sproul 

COMPANY   A  COMPANY    F  COMPANY    L 

Capt.  T.  A.  Bither  Capt.  E.  D.  McNear  Capt.  H.  L.  Wyrick 

1st  Lieut.  M.  R.  Robbins  1st  Lieut.  C.  C.   Rae  1st  Lieut.  G.  H.  Hagar 

2nd  Lieut.  G.  B.  Wallace  2nd  Lieut.  C.  E.  Lutz  2nd  Lieut.  L.  S.  Davis 

COMPANY    B  COMPANY    G  .       COMPANY    M 

Capt.  M.  J.  Dillman  Capt.  A.  F.  Bridge  Capt.  W.  W.  Ferrier 

1st  Lieut.  T.  I.  Storer  1st  Lieut.  A.  W.  Guillou  1st  Lieut.  O.   E.   Sandman 

2nd  Lieut.  F.  B.  Delano  2nd  Lieut.  W.  H.  Jaenicke        2nd  Lieut.   H.   Myer 

COMPANY    C  COMPANY    H  COMPANY    N 

Capt.  A.  Eaton  Capt.  B.  S.  Clendenin  Capt.  C.  B.  Fox 

1st  Lieut.  R.  P.  Wisecarver      1st  Lieut.  R.  W.  Tavenner       1st  Lieut.  C.  H.  Thompson 

2nd  Lieut.  S.  H.  McFadden      2nd  Lieut.  E.  H.  Clausen       2nd  Lieut.  G.  M.  Simonson 

COMPANY    D  COMPANY   I  COMPANY    0 

Capt.  H.  M.  Albright  Capt.  K.  C.  Mohrhardt  Capt.  A.  F.  Brown 

lst  Lieut.  E.  N.  Murphy  1st  Lieut.  W.  H.  Smyth  1st  Lieut.  J.   P.  Zipf 

2nd  Lieut.  H.  W.  Platz  2nd  Lieut.  J.  D.  Foster  2nd  Lieut.  J.   B.   Parkinson 

company  e  company  k  company   p 

Capt.  J.  R.  Quinn  Capt.  F.  L.  Wilson  Capt.  G.  N.  Browning 

1st  Lieut.  B.  H.  Eveleth  1st  Lieut.  A.  B.  Tinning  1st  Lieut.  C.  S.  Wheeler,  Jr. 

2nd  Lieut.  W.  P.  Stephenson  2nd  Lieut.  C.  L.  LeBaron  2nd  Lieut.  E.  Daney 

52 


3n  Jfflemortam 


GEORGE  DAVIDSON 

Professor  of  Geography  Emeritus 

CHARLES  RAVENSCROFT  GREENLEAF 

Honorary  Professor  of  Hygiene 

FRANK  EDWARD  JOHNSON 

Instructor  in  Soils 

ABRAHAM  RAPHAEL 

A  Sophomore  of  the  College  of  Civil  Engineering 

WALLACE  KENDALL  GAYLORD 

Assistant  in  Chemistry 

HENRY  WILSON  COFFMAN 
A  Sophomore  of  the  College  of  Agriculture 


GOVERNOR  HIRAM   W.   JOHNSON 

REGENTS  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 


REGENTS  OF  THE  UNIVERSITY 

Regents  Ex  Officio 
His  Excellency  Hiram  Warren  Johnson      Hon.  Edward  Hyatt 


Governor  and  President  of  the  Regents 

His  Honor  Albert  J.  Wallace 

Lieutenant-Governor 

Hon.  Arthur  H.  Hewitt 
Speaker  of  the  Assembly 


State   Superintendent   of   Public   In- 
struction 

Hon.  A.  Lowndes  Scott 

President  of  the   State  Agricultural 
Society 

Rudolph  Julius  Taussig,  Esq. 

President  of  the  Mechanics'  Institute 


Bent.  Ide  Wheeler,  Ph.  D.,  LL.D. 

President    of    the    University 


Appointed  Regents 


Isaias  William  Hellman,  Esq. 
Chester  Row  ell,  ^Sl.D. 
John  Eliot  Budd,  A. I ). 
Mrs.  Phoebe  Apperson  Hearst 
Arthur  William  Foster,  Esq. 
Garrett  William  McEnerney,  Esq. 
Guy  Chaffee  Earl,  A.B. 
James  Wilfred  McKinley,  B.S. 


Re\ '.  Peter  Christopher  Yorke,  S.T.D. 
John  Alexander  Britton,  Esq. 
Frederick  William  Dohrmann,  Esq. 
William  Henry  Crocker,  Ph.B. 
Truxtun  Beale,  LL.B. 
Charles  Stetson  Wheeler,  B.L. 
Philip  Ernest  Bowles,  Ph.B. 
James  Kennedy  Moffitt,  B.S. 


Officers  of  the  Regents 
His  Excellency  Hiram  Warren  Johnson      Isaias  William  Hellman,  Jr.,  Ph.B. 

President  Treasurer 


Victor  Hfndricks  Henderson,  B.L. 

Secretary  and  Land  Agent 


Warren  Olnly,  Jr.,  A.B.,  LL.B. 
Counsel 


56 


PRESIDENT    BENJAMIN    1DK    WHEELER 


FACULTY 


FACULTY  OF  THE  ACADEMIC  COLLEGES 
AT  BERKELEY 

Philosophy 

George  Holmes  Howison,  M.A.,  LL.D.,  Professor  of  Philosophy,  Emeritus. 
George  Malcolm  Stratton,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Psychology,  on  the  Mills 

Foundation. 
Charles  Henry  Rieber,  Ph.  D.,  Professor  of  Logic  and  Dean  of  the  Summer 

Session. 
George  Plimpton  Adams,  M.A.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Philosophy  (absent 

on  leave,  1911-12). 
Arthur  Upham  Pope,  M.A.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Philosophy. 
Warner  Brown,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Psychology. 
Francis  C.  Becker,  A.B.,  Instructor  in  Philosophy. 
Clarence  Irving  Lewis,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Philosophy. 

Education 

Alexis  Frederick  Lange,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  the  Theory  and  Practice  of 
Education  and  Dean  of  the  Faculties. 

Charles  Edward  Rugh,  A.B.,  M.L.,  Associate  Professor  of  Education. 

Winfield  Scott  Thomas,  A.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Education,  and  Ex- 
aminer of  Schools. 

Herbert  Galen  Lull,  M.A.,  Acting  Assistant  Professor  of  Education. 

Richard  Gause  Boone,  Ph.D.,  Lecturer  in  Education. 

John  Swett,  Honorary  Lecturer  in  Education. 

David  Prescott  Barrows,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Political  Science  and  Dean  of 
the  Graduate  School. 

Jurisprudence 

William  Carey  Jones,  M.A.,  Professor  of  Jurisprudence. 

Curtis  Holbrook  Lindley,  Honorary  Professor  of  the  Law  of  Mines  and 

Water. 
George  Henry  Boke,  Ph.B.,  M.A.,  LL.B.,  Professor  of  Law. 
Orrin  Kip  McMurray,  Ph.B.,  LL.B.,  Professor  of  Law. 
Alexander  Marsden  Kidd,  A.B.,  LL.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Law. 
Lester  Henry  Jacobs,  Ph.B.,  LL.B.,  Lecturer  in  Law. 

Warren  Olney,  Jr.,  A.B.,  LL.B.,  Lecturer  in  Law  (absent  on  leave,  191 1-12). 
Max  Thelen,  B.L.,  M.A.,  Lecturer  in  Law. 
Joseph  P.  Chamberlain,  LL.B.,  Lecturer  in  Law  (absent  on  leave,  1911-12). 

.      58 


FACULTY 

Carlos  Greenleaf  White,  J.D.,  Lecturer  in  Law. 
Arthur  Gould  Tasheira,  A.B.,  LL.B.,  Lecturer  in  Law. 
Farnham  Pond  Griffiths,  B.L.,  B.A.  (Oxon.),  Lecturer  in  Law. 
Matthew  Christopher  Lynch,  J.D.,  Instructor  in  Law. 
William  Edward  Colby,  LL.B.,  Lecturer  in  Law  of  Mines. 
Maurice  Edward  Harrison,  J.D.,  Lecturer  in  Commercial  Law. 
Allan  P.  Matthew,  A.B.,  LL.B.,  Lecturer  on  the  Law  of  Interstate  Trans- 
portation. 

History 

Henry  Morse  Stephens,  M.A.,  LL.D.,  Professor  of  History  and  Director  of 
University  Extension. 

Thomas  Rutherford  Bacon,  A.B.,  B.D.,  Professor  of  Modern  European 
History. 

Herbert  Eugene  Bolton,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  American  History. 

Frederick  John  Teggart,  A.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  Pacific  Coast  History, 
Curator  Academy  of  Pacific  Coast  History,  Lecturer  in  University  Ex- 
tension. 

Jacob  Neibert  Bowman,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Medieval  History. 

Richard  Frederick  Scholz,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Ancient  History. 

Donald  Eugene  Smith,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  History  and  Geography, 
Secretary  of  the  Department  of  History,  Lecturer  and  Acting  Director  of 
University  Extension. 

Eugene  Irving  McCormac,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  American  History. 

Louis  John  Paetow,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  English  History. 

Political  Science 

Bernard  Moses,  Ph.D.,  LL.D.,  Professor  of  History  and  Political  Science, 

Emeritus. 
David  Prescott  Barrows,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Political  Science  and  Dean  of 

the  Graduate  School. 
Thomas  Harrison  Reed,  A.B.,  LL.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  Government. 
George  Rapall  Noyes,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Slavic  Languages. 
Robert  A.  Campbell,  A.B.,  Lecturer  in  Government. 

Economics 

Adolph   Caspar  Miller,  M.A.,  Flood  Professor  of  Political  Economy  and 

Commerce  (absent  on  leave,  first  half  year,  1911-12). 
Carl  Copping  Plehn,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Finance,  on  the  Flood  Foundation. 

.    59 


FACULTY 

Henry  Rand  Hatfield,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Accounting  on  the  Flood  Founda- 
tion;  Secretary  of  the  College  of  Commerce  (absent  on  leave,  first  half- 
year,  1911-12). 

Wesley  Clair  Mitchell,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Political  Economy,  on  the  Flood 
Foundation. 

Albkrt  Wurts  Whitney,  A.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  Mathematics  and 
Insurance  Methods  on  the  Flood  Foundation. 

Lincoln  Hutchinson,  M.A.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Commerce,  on  the  Flood 
Foundation,  Dean  of  the  Lower  Division. 

Jessica  Blanche  Peixotto,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Sociology. 

Stuart  Daggett,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Railway  Economics,  on  the 
Flood  Foundation  ;  and  Secretary  of  the  College  of  Commerce,  first  half 
year,  1911-12. 

John  Graham  Brooks,  S.T.I).,  Lecturer  in  Social  Economics,  for  the  first  half- 
year,  191 1-12. 

Lucy  Ward  Stebbins,  A.B.,  Lecturer  in  Charities  and  Assistant  to  the  Dean 
of  Women. 

Fred  G.  Athearn,  A.B.,  Lecturer  in  Railway  Economics. 

Anthropology 

Alfred  Louis  Kroebfr,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Anthropology,  Secre- 
tary of  the  Department  of  Anthropology,  Curator  of  the  Anthropological 
Museum. 

David  Prescott  Barrows,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Political  Science  and  Dean  of 
the  Graduate  School. 

Nels  Christian*  Nelson,  M.L.,  Instructor  in  Anthropology  and  Assistant 
Curator  in  the  Anthropological  Museum. 

T.  T.  Waterman,  A.B.,  Instructor  in  Anthropology  and  Assistant  Curator  of 
the  Anthropological  Museum. 

Semitic  Languages 

William  Popper,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Semitic  Languages. 

Oriental  Languages 

John  Fryer,  LL.D.,  Agassiz  Professor  of  Oriental  Languages  and  Literature. 
Yoshi  Saburo  Kuno,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Japanese. 

Sanskrit 

Arthur  William   Rydek,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Sanskrit. 

60 


FACULTY 

Greek 

Edward  Bull  Clapp,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  the  Greek  Language  and  Literature. 

Isaac  Flagg,  Ph.D..  Professor  of  Greek,  Emeritus. 

James  Turney  Allen,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Greek. 

Ivan  Mortimer  Linforth,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Greek. 

Oliver  Miles  Washburn,  A.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Classical  Archaeology. 

Richard  Frederick  Scholz,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Ancient  History. 

Latin 

William  Augustus  Merrill,  Ph.D.,  L.H.D.,  Professor  of  the  Latin  Language 

and  Literature. 
Leon  Josiah  Richardson,  A.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  Latin. 
Clifton  Price,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Latin. 
Herbert  Chester  Nutting,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Latin. 
Oliver  Miles  Washburn,  A.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Classical  Archaeology. 
Torsten  Petersson,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Latin. 
Monroe  Emanuel  Deutsch,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Latin. 
Sereno  Burton  Clark,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Latin. 

English 

Charles  Mills  Gaylev,  Litt.D.,  LL.D.,  Professor  of  the  English  Language 
and  Literature. 

Cornelius  Beach  Bradley,  M.A.,  Professor  of  Rhetoric,  Emeritus. 

William  Dallam  Armes,  M.L.,  Associate  Professor  of  American  Literature. 

Chauncey  Wetmore  Wells,  A.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  English  Compo- 
sition. 

Martin  Charles  Flaherty,  Ph.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  Forensics. 

Walter  Morris  Hart,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  English  Philology. 

Thomas  Frederick  Sanford,  A.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  English  Literature. 

Benjamin  Putnam  Kurtz,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  English,  Lecturer 
in  University  Extension. 

Lucy  Sprague,  A.  B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  English,  and  Dean  of  Women. 

Charles  Don  von  Neumayer,  Instructor  in  Public  Speaking  (absent  on  leave, 
1911-12). 

George  Arnold  Smithson,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  English  Philology. 

Frederic  Thomas  Blanchard,  M.A.,  Instructor  in  English. 

Herbert  Ellsworth  Cory,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  English. 

George  Rupert  MacMinn,  A.B.,  Instructor  in  English. 

Leonard  Bacon,  A.B.,  Instructor  in  English. 

61 


FACULTY 
German 

Hugo  Karl  Schilling,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  the  German  Language  and  Liter- 
ature. 

Albin  Putzker,  M.A.,  Professor  of  German  Literature,  Emeritus. 

Joachim  Henry  Senger,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  German. 

Ludwig  Joseph  Demeter,  M.A.,  Assistant  Professor  of  German. 

Clarence  Paschall,  M.A.,  Assistant  Professor  of  German  (absent  on  leave, 
1911-12). 

Wilhelm  Robert  Richard  Pinger,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  German. 

Romanic  Languages 

Lucien  Foulet,  Lie.  es  L.,  Professor  of  the  French  Language  and  Literature. 

Rudolph  Schevill,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Spanish. 

Friedrich  Philipp  Louis  Paul  Wilmsen,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of 
French. 

Samuel  Alexander  Chambers,  M.A.,  Assistant  Professor  of  French  (absent 
on  leave,  1911-12). 

John  Taggart  Clark,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Romanic  Philology. 

Gustave  Faucheux,  B.  es  L.,  B.  es  Sc,  Assistant  Professor  of  French  Liter- 
ature. 

John  Allen  Child,  A.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Italian. 

Carlos  Bransby,  M.A.,  Litt.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Spanish. 

Charles  Harold  Howard,  M.A.,  Instructor  in  Spanish. 

Emmanuel  Benjamin  Lamare,  Instructor  in  French. 

Alfred  Solomon,  M.A.,  Instructor  in  French. 

Jeanne  Harouel  Greenleaf,  B.L.,  Instructor  in  French. 

Slavic  Languages 

George  Rapall  Noyes,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Slavic  Languages. 

Mathematics 

Mellen  Woodman  Haskell,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Mathematics. 

George  Cunningham  Edwards,  Ph.B.,  Professor  of  Mathematics. 

Derrick  Norman  Lehmer,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Mathematics  (absent 
on  leave,  first  half-year  1911-12). 

Albert  Wurts  Whitney,  A.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  Mathematics  and  In- 
surance Methods,  on  the  Flood  Foundation. 

Thomas  Milton  Putnam,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Mathematics. 

John  Hector  McDonald,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Mathematics. 

Benjamin  Abram  Bernstein,  A.B.,  Instructor  in  Mathematics. 

62 


FACULTY 

Charles  Kuschke,  M.A.,  Instructor  in  Mathematics. 
Baldwin  Munger  Woods,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Mathematics. 
Frank  Irwin,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Mathematics. 
Thomas  Buck,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Mathematics. 

Physics 

Frederick  Slate,  B.S.,  Professor  of  Physics. 

Exum  Percival  Lewis,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Physics. 

William  James  Raymond,  B.S.,  Associate  Professor  of  Physics. 

Ralph  Smith  Minor,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Physics. 

Elmer  Edgar  Hall,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Physics  (absent  on  leave, 

first  half-year,  1911-12). 
Thomas  Sidney  Elston,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Physics. 
Raymond  Barrington  Abbott,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Physics. 

Astronomy 

Armin  Otto  Leuschner,  Ph.D.,  Sc.D.,  Professor  of  Astronomy  and  Director 

of  the  Students'  Observatory. 
Russell  Tracy  Craweord,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Practical  Astronomy 

(absent  on  leave,  1911-12). 
Daniel  Walter  Morehouse,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Astronomy. 
Joseph  Haines  Moore,  Ph.D.,  Acting  Astronomer,  in  charge  of  the  D.  O.  Mills 

Expedition  to  Chile. 
Sturla  Einarsson,  A.B.,  Instructor  in  Practical  Astronomy. 
William  Ferdinand  Meyer,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Astronomy. 

Geography 

Ruliff  Stephen  Holway,  A.B.,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Physical  Geog- 
raphy. 

Lincoln  Hutchinson,  MA.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Commerce  on  the  Flood 
Foundation. 

Donald  Eugene  Smith,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  History  and  Geography, 
Secretary  of  the  Department  of  History,  Lecturer  and  Acting  Director  of 
University  Extension. 

William  Gardner  Reed,  M.A.,  Instructor  in  Climatology. 

Chemistry 

Edmond  O'Neill,  Ph.B.,  Professor  of  Inorganic  Chemistry. 
Walter  Charles  Blasdale,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Chemistry. 
Henry  Chalmers  Biddle,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry. 
William  Conger  Morgan,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry. 

63 


FACULTY 

Edward  Booth,  Ph.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Chemistry. 
C.  E.  Burke,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Chemistry. 

Botany 

William  Albert  Setchell,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Botany. 

Willis  Linn  Jepson,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Dendrology. 

Harvey  Monroe  Hall,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Economic  Botany  and 

Assistant  Botanist  to  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
Arthur  Russell  Moore,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Physiology. 

Zoology 

Charles  Atwood  Kofoid,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Zoology. 

William  Emerson  Ritter,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Zoology. 

John  Campbell  Merriam,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Palaeontology  and 

Historical  Geology. 
Harry  Beal  Torrey,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Zoology. 
John  Franklin  Daniel,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Zoology. 
Joseph  Abraham  Long,  Ph.D.,  Instructor  in  Zoology. 

Physiology 

Samuel  Steen  Maxwell,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Physiology. 
Thorburn   Brailsford   Robertson,   Ph.D.,   Associate   Professor  of   Physio- 
logical Chemistry. 
Arthur  Russell  Moore,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Physiology. 
Theodore  Crete  Burnett,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Physiology. 

Hygiene 

George  Frederick  Reinhardt,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Hygiene  and  Uni- 
versity Physician. 

Wilbur  A.  Sawyer,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Director  of  the  State  Hygienic  Laboratory. 

Eleanor  Stow  Bancroft,  M.D.,  Lecturer  in  Hygiene  and  Medical  Examiner 
(absent  on  leave,  1911-12). 

Ernest  Bryant  Hoag,  M.A.,  M.D.,  Lecturer  in  Public  Hygiene. 

John  Nivison  Force,  M.D.,  M.S.,  Lecturer  in  Hygiene  and  Assistant  Medical 
Examiner. 

Florence  Mabel  Sylvester,  M.D.,  Lecturer  in  Hygiene. 

Romilda  Paroni,  M.D.,  Lecturer  in  Hygiene  and  Medical  Examiner. 

Palaeontology 

John  Campbell  Merriam,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Palaeontology  and 

Historical  Geology. 
Bruce  Laurence  Clark,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Palaeontology. 

64 


FACULTY 

Geology 

Andrew  Cowper  Lawson,  M.A.,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Mineralogy  and  Geology 

(absent  on  leave,  first  half-year,  1911-12). 
John  Campbell  Merriam,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Palaeontology  and 

Historical  Geology.   , 
George  Davis  Louderback,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Geology. 
Harry  Oscar  Wood,  M.A.,  Instructor  in  Mineralogy  and  Geology. 
Charles  Laurence  Baker,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Geology  and  Mineralogy. 

Mineralogy 

Andrew  Cowper  Lawson,  M.A.,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Mineralogy  and  Geology 

(absent  on  leave,  first  half-year,  1911-12). 
Arthur  Starr  Eakle,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Mineralogy. 
Charles  Laurence  Baker,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Geology  and  Mineralogy. 
Harry  Oscar  Wood,  M.A.,  Instructor  in  Mineralogy  and  Geology. 

Mechanical  and  Electrical  Engineering 

Clarence  Linus  Cory,  M.M.E.,  John  W.  Mackay  Jr.  Professor  of  Electrical 
Engineering,  Director  of  the  Electric  Light  and  Power  System,  Dean  of 
the  College  of  Mechanics. 

Herman  White  Reynolds,  B.S.,  Associate  Professor  of  Mechanical  Engineer- 
ing (absent  on  leave,  1911-12). 

Joseph  Nisbet  LeConte,  B.S.,  M.M.E.,  Associate  Professor  of  Mechanical 
Engineering. 

Robert  Sibley,  B.S.,  Associate  Professor  of  Mechanical  Engineering. 

Harmon  Francis  Fischer,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Electrical  Engineering. 

Charles  Fletcher  Gilcrest,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Electrical  Engineering. 

Arthur  Boouer  Domonoske,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Mechanical  Engineering. 

Civil  Engineering 

Charles  Derleth,  Jr.,  B.S.,  C.E.,  Professor  of  Civil  Engineering. 

Frank  Soule,  Professor  of  Civil  Engineering,  Emeritus. 

Charles  Gilman  Hyde,  B.S.,  Professor  of  Sanitary  Engineering. 

Thomas  Bartlett  Sears,  C.E.,  Associate  Professor  of  Railroad  Engineering. 

Henry  J.  Kesner,  A.B.,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Civil  Engineering. 

Arthur  Carl  Alvarez,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Civil  Engineering. 

Horace  Seth  Griswold,  C.  E.,  Instructor  in  Civil  Engineering. 

Adolphus  James  Eddy,  B.  S.,  Instructor  in  Civil  Engineering. 

George  Inness  Gay,  B.  S.,  Instructor  in  Civil  Engineering. 

65 


FACULTY 
Irrigation 

Bernard  Alfred  Etcheverry,  B.S.,  Associate  Professor  of  Irrigation  Engin- 
eering. 

Albert  Edward  Chandler,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  the  Institutions  of 
Irrigation. 

Mining  and  Metallurgy 

Samuel  Benedict  Christy,  Ph.B.,  Sc.D.,  Professor  of  Mining  and  Metallurgy, 

and  Dean  of  the  College  of  Mining. 
Edward  Benjamin  Durham,  E.M.,  Associate  Professor  of  Mining. 
Ernest  Albion  Hersam,  B.S.,  Associate  Professor  of  Metallurgy. 
Curtis  Holbrook  Lindley,  Honorary  Professor  of  the  Law  of  Mines  and 

Water. 
Walter  Spangenberg  Morley,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Metallurgy. 

Drawing 

Hermann  Kower,  C.E.,  Associate  Professor  of  Drawing. 
Charles  Chapel  Judson,  Assistant  Professor  of  Drawing. 
Willson  Joseph  Wythe,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Drawing. 
Henry  Babad  Monges,  Jr.,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Drawing. 
Karl  Eugen  Neuhaus,  Instructor  in  Drawing. 

Architecture 

John  Galen  Howard,  Professor  of  Architecture. 

William  Charles  Hays,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Architecture. 

Melvin  Earl  Cummings,  Professor  of  Modeling  (A),  Instructor  in  Modeling. 

Henry  Washington  Sea  well,  Instructor  in  Water-Color  and  Pen-and-ink 

Drawing. 
Warren  Charles  Perry,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Architecture. 

Agriculture 

Edward  James  Wickson,  M.A.,  Professor  of  Agriculture;  Director  of  the 
Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 

Eugene  Woldemar  Hilgard,  Ph.D.,LL.D.,  Professor  of  Agriculture,  Emeritus. 

Robert  Hills  Loughridge,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Agricultural  Chemistry. 
Emeritus. 

Leroy  Anderson,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Agricultural  Practice  and  Superintend- 
ent of  University  Farm  Schools. 

Meyer  Edward  Jaffa,  M.S.,  Professor  of  Nutrition,  in  charge  of  the  Poultry 
Station. 

66 


FACULTY 

Charles  William  Woodworth,  M.S.,  Professor  of  Economic  Entomology. 
Ralph  Elliott  Smith,  B.S.,  Professor  of  Plant  Pathology,  Superintendent  of 

the  Southern  California  Pathological  Laboratory  and  Experiment  Station. 
George  Wright  Shaw,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Experimental  Agronomy 

and  Agricultural  Technology. 
Ernest  William  Major,  B.Agr.,  Associate  Professor  of  Animal  Industries 

and  Manager  of  the  University  Farm  (absent  on  leave,  1911-12). 
Frederic  Theodore  Bioletti,  M.S.,  Associate  Professor  of  Viticulture. 
Warren  Thompson  Clarke,  B.S.,  Associate  Professor  of  Horticulture  and 

Superintendent  of  University  Extension  in  Agriculture. 
John  Sedgwick  Burd,  B.S.,  Associate  Professor  of  Agricultural  Chemistry, 

in  charge  of  Fertilizer  Control. 
George  Elden  Colby,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Agricultural  Chemistry. 
Henry  Josef  Quayle,  A.B.,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Entomology. 
Clarence  Melvin  Haring,  D.V.M.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Veterinary  Science 

(absent  on  leave,  second  half-year,  191 1 -12). 
Ernest  Brown  Babcock,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Agricultural  Education. 
W'illiam  Brodbeck  Herms,  M.A.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Entomology. 
William  T.  Horne,  B.Sc,  Assistant  Professor  of  Plant  Pathology. 
Charles  Bernard  Lipman,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Soils. 
Erwin  J.  Lea,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Agricultural  Chemistry. 
John  Henry  Norton,  M.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Agricultural  Chemistry. 
J.  Eliot  Coit,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Pomology. 
Howard  Phillips,  Instructor  in  Animal  Industries. 
Emil  Henry  Hagemann,  Instructor  in  Dairying. 

Robert  Edwin  Mansell,  Instructor  in  Horticulture,  in  charge  of  the  Agri- 
cultural Grounds. 
Bliss  S.  Brown,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Horticulture. 
W.  G.  Hummel,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Agricultural  Education. 
Cyril  Adelbert  Stebbins,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Agricultural  Education. 
Leon  Milehane  Davis,  Instructor  in  Dairy  Industry,  University  Farm. 
J.  I.  Thompson,  B.S.A.,  Instructor  in  Animal  Industry. 
John  Colburn  Bridwell,  B.S.,  Instructor  in  Entomology. 
Carl  Howard  McCharles,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Agricultural  Chemistry. 
H.  A.  Ruehe,  B.S.A.,  Instructor  in  Dairy  Husbandry. 
Paul  Llewellyn  Hibbard,  B.Sc,  Instructor  in  Agricultural  Chemistry. 
Frank  Edward  Johnson,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Soils. 
Leon  Oswald  Bonnet,  Instructor  in  Viticulture. 
Friedrich  Carl  Hermann  Flossfeder,  Instructor  in  Viticulture. 

67 


FACULTY 

Fred  Harvey  Bolster,  A.B.,  Instructor  in  Botany  and  Horticulture 

C.  O.  Smith,  Instructor  in  Plant  Pathology,  Whittier. 

Elizabeth  Hight  Smith,  Instructor  in  Plant  Pathology. 

Bennie  Adolph  Madson,  B.S.A.,  Instructor  in  Experimental  Agronomy. 

Fred  Montreyille  Hayes,  Instructor  in  Veterinary  Science. 

Military  Science  and  Tactics 

Edward  M.  Lewis,  Major  United  States  Infantry,  Graduate  of  the  United 
States  Military  Academy,  Professor  of  Military  Science  and  Tactics. 

Physical  Culture 

Walter  Edmund  Magee,  Professor  of  Physical  Culture. 

Victor  Vladimir  Ligda,  B.S.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Physical  Culture. 

Anatomy 

Robert  Orton  Moody,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Anatomy  (absent  on 

leave  first  half-year,  191 1- 12). 
Antonio  Menotti  dal  Piaz,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Anatomy. 
Richard  Warren  Harvey,  M.S.,  Instructor  in  Anatomy. 

Pathology  and  Bacteriology 

Frederick  Parker  Gay,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Pathology. 
John  G.  Fitz-Gerald,  M.B.,  Associate  Professor  of  Bacteriology. 
Glanville  Yeisley  Rusk,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Pathology. 
Adelbert  W.  Lee,  M.  D.,  Instructor  in  Pathology. 

Music 

John  Frederick  Wolle,  Mus.D.,  Professor  of  Music  (absent  on  leave,  1911-12). 
Richard  Frederick  Scholz,  Ph.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Ancient  History. 

The  Library 

Joseph  Cummings  Rowell,  M.A.,  Librarian. 
Harold  Lewis  Leupp,  A.B.,  Associate  Librarian. 

Administrative  Officers 

Benjamin  Ide  Wheeler,  Ph.D.,  LL.D.,  President  of  the  University,  Presi- 
dent, ex  officio,  of  the  Senate. 
James  Sutton,  Ph.B.,  Recorder  of  the  Faculties,  Secretary  of  the  Academic 
Senate. 


68 


FACULTY  OF  THE  AFFILIATED  COLLEGES 

Hastings  College  of  the  Law 

Benjamin  Ide  Wheeler,  Ph.D.,  LL.D.,  President  of  the  University,  President. 
Edward  Robeson  Taylor,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Law,  Dean  of  the  Faculty  of  the 

Hastings  College  of  the  Law. 
Louis  Thecdore  Hengstler,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Law. 
Robert  Waite  Harrison,  A.B.,  LL.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Law. 
James  Arthur  Ballentine,  A.B.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Law. 
Richard  Calhoun  Harrison,  A.B.,  LL.B.,  Instructor  in  Law. 
Golden  W.  Bell,  Instructor  in  Law. 

California  College  of  Pharmacy 

Benjamin  Ide  Wheeler,  Ph.D.,  LL.D.,  President  of  the  University,  President. 

Franklin  Theodore  Green,  Ph.  G.,  Professor  of  Chemistry,  Director  of  the 
Chemical  Laboratories,  and  Dean  of  the  Faculty  of  the  College  of  Phar- 
macy. 

William  Theodore  Wenzell,  Ph.M.,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Chemistry,  Emeritus. 

Albert  Schneider,  M.D.,  Ph.D.,  Professor  of  Pharmacognosy,  Economic 
Pharmaceutical  Botany,  Histology  and  Bacteriology. 

Henry  Benjamin  Carey,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Botany,  Materia  Medica 
and  Physiology. 

Frederick  William  Nish,  Ph.G.,  Professor  of  Pharmacy,  Director  of  the 
Pharmaceutical  Laboratories. 

Harley  Rupert  Wiley,  A.B.,  LL.S.,  Lecturer  on  Pharmacal  Jurisprudence. 

Robert  Alexander  Leet,  Ph.G.,  Lecturer  in  Pharmacy. 

Valentine  Schmidt,  Lecturer  in  Pharmacy. 

Franklin  Currier  Smith,  Lecturer  in  Pharmacy. 

Haydn  Mozart  Simmons,  Ph.G.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Materia  Medica  and 
Lecturer  on  Toxicology. 

College  of  Dentistry 

Benjamin  Ide  Wheeler,  Ph.D.,  LL.D.,  President  of  the  University,  President. 
James  Graham  Sharp,  D.D.S.,  M.D.,  Professor  of  the  Principles  and  Practice 

of  Surgery,  Dean  of  the  Faculty  of  the  College  of  Dentistry. 
William  Fuller  Sharp,  D.D.S.,  D.M.D.,  Professor  of  Prosthetic  Dentistry. 
Joseph  Dupuy  Hcdgen,  D.D.S.,  Professor  of  Operative  Dentistry. 
Henry  Benjamin  Carey,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Anatomy  and  Histology, 

Materia  Medica  and  Therapeutics. 
John  Burnside  Tufts,  D.D.S.,  Professor  of  Dental  Pathology,  Therapeutics, 

and  Orthodontia. 

69 


FACULTY 

George  Lusk  Bean,  D.D.S.,  Professor  of  Dental  Porcelain. 
Guy  Stillman  Millberry,  D.D.S.,  Professor  of  Dental  Chemistry  and  Metal- 
lurgy and  Superintendent  of  the  Infirmary. 
Samuel  Steen  Maxwell,  Ph.D.,  Associate  Professor  of  Physiology. 
H.  T.  Moore,  Lecturer  on  Surgery. 

A.  H.  Suggett,  Lecturer  and  Clinical  Instructor  in  Orthodontia. 
Louis  de  Fontenay  Bartlett,  Ph.B.,  LL.B.,  Lecturer  in  Dental  Jurisprudence. 
Otto  P.  Roller,  D.D.S.,  Special  Instructor  in  Dental  Porcelain. 
Roscoe  A.  Day,  Instructor  in  Orthodontia  Technic. 
Sherrell  Woodworth  Hall,  D.D.S.,  Instructor  in  Extracting. 
Elmer  Ellsworth  Evans,  D.D.S.,  Assistant  Instructor  in  Dentistry. 
Malcolm  Goddard,  B.S.,  D.D.S.,  Instructor  in  Comparative  Anatomy. 
John  Edwin  Gurley,  D.D.S.,  Instructor  in  Dental  Chemistry. 
F.  E.  Hart,  Instructor  in  Dental  Technics. 

College  of  Medicine 

Benjamin  Ide  Wheeler,  Ph.D.,  LL.D.,  President  of  the  University,  President. 

Arnold  Abraham  D'Ancona,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Dean  of  the  Faculty  of  the  College 
of  Medicine,  Superintendent  of  the  University  of  California  Hospital. 

Robert  Armistead  McLean,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Clinical  and  Operative  Sur- 
gery, Emeritus. 

William  Breakey  Lewitt,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Pediatrics. 

George  Herman  Powers,  M.A.,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Ophthalmology,  Emeritus. 

William  Watt  Kerr,  M.A.,  M.B.,  CM.,  Professor  of  Clinical  Medicine. 

Douglass  William  Montgomery,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Diseases  of  the  Skin. 

Charles  August  Von  Hoffman,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Gynecology. 

Harry  Mitchell  Sherman,  M.A.,  M.D..  Professor  of  the  Principles  and 
Practice  of  Surgery. 

Herbert  Charles  Moffitt,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Professor  of  the  Principles  and  Prac- 
tice of  Medicine. 

Thomas  Waterman  Huntington,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Clinical  Surgery. 

Harry  Everett  Alderson,  M.D.,  Assistant  in  Diseases  of  the  Skin. 

John  Campbell  Spencer,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Genito-Urinary 
Surgery. 

Wallace  Irving  Terry,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Surgery. 

Robert  Orton  Moody,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Anatomy  (absent  on 
leave,  first  half-year,  1911-12). 

Howard  Morrow,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Diseases  of  the  Skin. 

August  Jerome  Lartigau,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Gynecology. 

Samuel  Johns  Hunkin,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Orthopedic  Surgery. 

70 


FACULTY 

Philip  King  Brown,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Clinical  Pathology. 

Raymond  John  Russ,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Surgery   (absent  on  leave, 

April  I,  191 1,  to  October  1,  191 1). 
Sanford  Blum,  A.B.,  M.S.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Pediatrics. 
Henry  Anthon  Lewis  Ryfkogel,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Surgery. 
Harold  Brunn,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Surgery. 
George  Elliott  Ebright,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Medicine. 

Carl  Seigfried  Gunther  Nagel,  M.D.,  Ch.D.,  Instructor  in  Ophthalmology. 
Haydn  Mozart  Simmons,  Ph.G.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Materia  Medica  and 

Therapeutics,  Instructor  in  Materia  Medica  and  Lecturer  on  Toxicology. 
Herbert  Williams  Allen,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Clinical  Pathology. 
Rachel  Leona  Ash,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Medicine. 
Walter  Scott  Franklin,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Ophthalmology. 
Tracy  George  Russell,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Surgery. 
Adelbert  W.  Lee,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Pathology. 
William  G.  Moore,  Instructor  in  Gynecology. 
Henry  Behrend  Albert  Kugeler,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Surgery. 
Albert  J.  Houston,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Diseases  of  the  Ear,  Nose  and  Throat. 

San  Francisco  Institute  of  Art 

Benjamin  Ide  Wheeler,  Ph.D.,  LL.D.,  President  of  the  University,  President. 
Theodore  Wores,  Professor  of  Drawing  and  Painting,  Dean  of  the  Faculty 

of  the  California  School  of  Design. 
John  Aloysius  Stanton,  Professor  of  Drawing  and  Painting. 
Melvin  Earl  Cummings,  Professor  of  Modeling,  Instructor  in  Modeling. 
Charles  Chapel  Judson,  Assistant  Professor  of  Drawing. 
Alice  B.  Chittenden,  Assistant  Professor  of  Drawing. 
Robert  Howe  Fletcher,  Assistant  Professor  of  the  History  of  Art. 
Charles  Frank  Ingerson,  Assistant  Professor  of  Decorative  Design  (absent 

on  leave,  1911-12). 
Pedro  Joseph  Lemos,  Assistant  Professor  of  Decorative  Design. 
Frank  van  Sloun,  Assistant  Professor  of  Drawing  and  Painting. 
Gertrude  Morin  Withers,  Instructor  in  Drawing. 

Lick  Observatory 

Benjamin  Ide  Wheeler,  Ph.D.,  LL.D.,  President  of  the  University,  President. 
William  Wallace  Campbell,  Sc.D.,  LL.D.,  Director  of  the  Lick  Observatory, 

and  Astronomer  (absent  on  leave,  June  9  to  September  29,  191 1). 
Richard  Hawley  Tucker,  C.E.,  Astronomer  (absent  on  leave,  from  July  1 

to  October  1,  191 1). 

71 


FACULTY 

Heber  Doust  Curtis,  Ph.D.,  Astronomer. 

Robert  Grant  Aitken,  M.A.,  Sc.D.,  Astronomer,  and  Acting  Director  of  the 

Lick  Observatory  (to  September  25,  1911). 
William  Hammond  Wright,  B.S.,  Astronomer. 

College  of  Medicine,  Los  Angeles 

Benjamin  Ide  Wheeler,  Ph.D.,  LL.D.,  President  of  the  University,  President. 

W.  Jarvis  Barlow,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Dean  of  Faculty  and  Professor  of  Medicine. 

J.  P.  Widney,  A.M.,  M.D.,  LL.D.,  Emeritus  Dean  and  Professor  of  Medicine. 

E.  A.  Follansbee,  M.D.,  Emeritus  Professor  of  Diseases  of  Children. 

Henry  S.  Orme,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Emeritus  Professor  of  Hygiene  and  State 
Medicine. 

J.  H.  Utley,  M.D.,  Emeritus  Professor  of  Medicine. 

Joseph  Kurtz,  M.D.,  Emeritus  Professor  of  Orthopedic  Surgery. 

George  W.  Lasher,  M.D.,  Emeritus  Professor  of  Surgery. 

Granville  MacGowan,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Genito-Urinary  Diseases. 

H.  G.  Brainerd,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Psychiatry  and  Neurology. 

H.  Bert  Ellis,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Ophthalmology. 

Melvin  L.  Moore,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Obstetrics. 

Carl  Kurtz,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Gynecology. 

Stanley  P.  Black,  A.  M.,  M.D.,  Consulting  Professor  of  Pathology. 

Ralph  Williams,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Dermatology. 

Hill  Hastings,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Otology,  Rhinology  and  Laryngology. 

George  H.  Kress,  B.S.,  M.D.,  Secretary  of  Faculty  and  Professor  of  Hygiene. 

W.  W.  Richardson,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Surgery. 

P.  V.  K.  Johnson,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Pediatrics. 

Tiios.  J.  Orbison,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Applied  Therapeutics. 

Walter  Brem,  M.D.,  Professor  of  Pathology. 

Hugo  A.  Kieffer,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  in  Ophthalmology. 

Titian  J.  Coffey,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Obstetrics. 

Dudley  Fulton,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Principles  and  Practice  of 
Medicine. 

Donald  Frick,  M.D.,  Assistant  to  the  Dean  and  Assistant  Professor  of  Clini- 
cal Medicine. 

A.  L  Kelsey,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Otology,  Rhinology,  and  Laryn- 
gology. 

John  C.  Hollister,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Gynecology  and  Surgery. 

Edmund  Myer  Lazard,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Obstetrics. 

Henry  H.  Lissner,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professof  of  Clinical  Medicine. 

72 


FACULTY 

L.  M   Powers,  M.D.,  Lecturer  on  Public  Health  and  State  Medicine. 

Ross  Moore,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Professor  of  Psychiatry. 

F.  D.  Bullard,  A.M.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Ophthalmology. 

A.  Soiland,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Electro-Therapeutics  and  Radiology. 

W.  R.  Molony,  M.D.,  Demonstrator  in  Surgical  Anatomy. 

Bertnard  Smith,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Medicine. 

Eliot  Alden,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Surgery. 

Charles  Lewis  Allen,  Assistant  Professor  of  Clinical  Neurology. 

W.  T.  McArthur,  M.D.,  F.R.C.S.,  Instructor  in  Clinical  Surgery. 

Francis  L.  Anton,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Gynecology. 

Gurney  Newlin,  LL.B.,  Instructor  in  Medical  Jurisprudence. 

Robert  L.  Cunningham,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Assistant  Instructor  in  Clinical  Medicine. 

Rea  Smith,  A.B.,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Operative  Surgery. 

Harvey  McNeil,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Dietetics. 

R.  T.  Bullard,  M.  D.,  Instructor  in  Gynecology. 

A.  Tyroler,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Physical  Diagnosis. 

C.  C.  Hunter,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Medicine. 

E.  C.  Seymour,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Clinical  Microscopy. 

W.  H.  Kiger,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Surgery. 

C.  E.  Zerfing,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Clinical  Surgery. 

George  E.  Malsbary,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Medicine. 

Harold  Smith,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Therapeutics. 

W.  H.  Dudley,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Diseases  of  Ear,  Nose  and  Throat. 

C.  H.  Montgomery,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Diseases  of  Ear,  Nose  and  Throat 

P.  O.  Sundin,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Pediatrics. 

I.  C.  Bancroft,  M.D.,  Clinical  Instructor  in  Diseases  of  the  Skin. 

C.  L.  Bennett,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Clinical  Medicine. 

J.  C.  White,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Medicine. 

J.  E.  Colloran,  M.D.,  Instructor  in  Surgery. 

E.  C.  Moore,  M.  D.,  Instructor  in  Clinical  Surgery. 

J.  J.  Von  Kaathoven,  M.  D.,  Instructor  in  Clinical  Surgery. 


73 


SENIOR    CLASS 


SENIOR   CLASS 


OFFICERS 


H.      N.      ROGERS 


C.     S     WHEELER,     JR. 


First  Term 

PRESIDENT 
H.  N.  ROGERS 

FIRST  VICE-PRESIDENT 
MISS  MILDRED  JORDAN 

SECOND  VICE-PRESIDENT 
C.  S.  WHEELER,  JR. 

SECRETARY 
MISS  GRACE  WEEKS 

TREASURER 
S.  G.  WILDER 

SERGEANT-AT-ARMS 
C.  L.  BUTLER 

YELL  LEADER 
J.  R.  QUINN 


Second  Term 

PRESIDENT 
C.  S.  WHEELER,  JR. 

FIRST  VICE-PRESIDENT 
MISS  MAY  CHASE 

SECOND  VICE-PRESIDENT 
R.  L.  SHURTLEFF 

SECRETARY 
MISS  GRACE  HAMILTON 

TREASURER 
L.  S.   BLACK 

SERGEANT-AT-ARMS 
J.    G.   SWEET 

YELL  LEADER 
J.  R.  QUINN 


76 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


THE    UPPER   CLASS    BENCH 


Roy   Charles  Abbott,   Natural   Sciences,  Ontario 

Edwin  Allen  Abeel,  Mechanics,  Santa  Rosa 

S  *  E ;  T  B  n  ;  Student  Welfare  Committee  (4)  ;   Chairman   Committee  on  Per- 
manent Organization. 
Edna  Little  Adams,  Natural  Sciences,  Springville 

Robert  Thomas  Aitken,  Natural  Sciences,  Mt.  Hamilton 

2<t>E. 

Horace  Marden  Albright,  Social  Sciences,  Bishop 

Del  Rey;  Economics  Club;  Secretary-treasurer  Commerce  Club  (3);  League 
of  the  Republic;  Bench  and  Bar  Law  Club;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff  (3);  Soph- 
omore Informal  Committee ;  Sophomore  Smoker  Committee ;  Captain  Co.  D 
(4). 

Anna  Theresa  Alexander,  Social  Sciences,  Riverside 

Women's  Orchestra   (3),   (4)  ;  Sprechverband  (3),  (4). 

Irene  Elizabeth  Alexander,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

Chester   Arthur  Allen,   Social    Sciences,  Everett,  Mass. 

Abracadabra ;  Golden  Bear ;  Winged  Helmet ;  "Big  C"  Society ;  Custodian  of 
Ax;  Varsity  Football  (2),  (3),  (4);  Varsity  Baseball  Team  (1),  (2),  (3); 
Captain  (4)  ;  Junior  Day  Committee ;  Senior   Ball   Committee. 

Leroy  Walton  Allen,  Commerce,  Alameda 

Abracadabra;  Golden  Bear;  Band  Captain  (4);  Vice-President  University  Or- 
chestral Society  (3),  (4)  ;  Commerce  Club;  Glee  Club;  Senior  Extravaganza 
Committee. 

Gerald    Miner   Allen,   Commerce,  Livermore 

Del   Rey ;   Glee   Club ;   Commerce   Club. 

Lillian  Edna   Amos,  Social   Sciences,  Portland,  Ore. 

*BK. 


77 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Edward  Otto  Amundsen,  Agriculture,  Chicago,   111. 

Agricultural   Club,   Treasurer    (4). 

Charles  Allen  Anderson,  Natural  Sciences,  Oakland 

2*E;    Mandolin    Club,    Secretary    (3);  Director   (4);  Cadet  Band. 

Leo  James   Anderson,   Agriculture,  Mare  Island 

Casimir ;  A  Z ;  Agricultural  Club. 


James  Christian  Andreason,  Agriculture, 
Alice  Lorraine  Andrews,  Letters, 


Ferndale 
Berkeley 


r*B;  *BK;  Prytanean;  English  Club;  Y.  W.  C.  A.;  President  Equal  Suf- 
frage Study  Club  (3)  ;  President  A.  W.  S.  (4)  ;  Winner  Bonnheim  Essay 
Prize  (1),  (2);  Winner  Cook  Poetry  Prize  (3);  Blue  and  Gold  staff  (3); 
Woman's  Day  Occident  (4);  A.  W.  S.  Student  Affairs  Committee;  Proctor 
Senior   Women's   Hall. 


William  Harry  Archer,  Mechanics  (Electrical), 
Pirate;  TBn. 


Santa  Barbara 


Oakland 


Harry   Arthur   Armstrong.    Civil   Engineering, 

Civil  Engineering  Association;  Librarian  (4). 
Mary  Edna  Armstrong,   Social  Sciences,  Redlands 

Art  History  Circle. 
James   Alexander  Arnott,    Mechanics,  San   Francisco 

"Big  C"  Society;  Vice-President  A.  E.  and  M.  E.  (4);  Track  Team  (3). 

May  Atkinson,   Social   Sciences,  Azusa 

r*B. 

Ulysses  Sheldon  Attix,  Electrical  Engineering,  Portland,   Ore. 

2  *  E ;  A.  E.  and  M.  E. 
David  LeRoy  Babcock,  Mechanics,  Fruitvale 

A.  E.  and  M.  E. 
Garabed    Stevens    Baboyan,    Civil    Engineering,  Los  Angeles 


freshman-sophomore  pushball 


78 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Markell  Craig  Baer,  Social  Sciences,  Cloverdale 

League  of  the  Republic,  Treasurer  (3),  Vice-President  (4)  ;  Football  Squad 
(3);  Congress;  General  Committee  Senior  Week. 

Floyd  Philip  Bailey,  Mechanics,  Healdsburg 

Pirates;  A.  E.  and  M.  E. 

Roy  VanEton  Bailey,  Social  Sciences,  Long  Beach 

Clara  Alice  Baker,  Social  Sciences,  Pasadena 

Gladys   Page  Baker,  Letters,  Lompoc 

Y.  W.  C.  A. ;  Das  Deutsche  Kranzchen ;  Governor  Senior  Women's  Hall  (4)  ; 
Senior  Advisory  Committee ;  Senior  Women's  Banquet ;  Caesar  and  Cleopatra 
(3). 

Jerome  Eric  Barieau,   Civil   Engineering,  San  Francisco. 

Calvin  Rankin  Barnes,  Letters,  San  Diego 

Dwight;    Cast  Junior   Farce    (3);    Blue  and  Gold  staff. 

Earl  Desmond  Barnett,  Mining,  Berkeley 

Mary  Robinson  Barr,  Social  Science,  Sanger 

A.  W.  S.  Fantasy  (2). 

Mary  Louise  Barron,  Commerce,  Berkeley 

Fencing  Team  (3). 
John  Moody  Basham,  Mining,  Hayward 

Mining  Association,  Vice-President    (4)  ;     Polydeucean     Club     (1),     (2),     (3). 

President  (4). 

Violet  May  Bathgate,  Natural  Science,  Orange 

Harold  George  Baugh,  Mechanics,  Petaluma 

Abracadabra. 

Cora  Alice  Bauml,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

William ita  Bee  Bayley,  Social  Sciences,  Livermore 

Cranford;  A.  W.  S.   Finance  Committee   (3);  Book  Exchange  Committee   (3). 
Eunice  Newell  Beal,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Andreas 

Helen  Lowell  Beckwith,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

AAA;  Junior  Farce  Cast;  Blue  and  Gold  (3);  Associate  Editor  of  Occident; 

Senior  Advisory  Committee. 
Stanley  Elgin  Clinton  Behneman,  Civil  Engineering,     Alameda 

Civil  Engineering  Association. 
Gilda  Belloni,  Social  Sciences,  Ferndale 

Copa  de  Oro. 
Roland  Bendel,  Civil  Engineering,  Oakland 

Acacia. 
Irwin   Campbell   Berry,  Agriculture,  Berkeley 

Z^';   ONE;    Freshman  Track  Team ;    University  Assembly  Committee. 
William  Anthony  Binsacca,  Mining,  Soledad 

Casimir ;  Mining  Association. 
Tom  Allen  Bithfr,  Civil  Engineering,  Berkeley 

0  3 ;  Civil  Engineering  Association  ;   Cadet  Officers'  Club ;  Captain  Company  A ; 

Blue  and  Gold  staff  (3)  ;  A.  S.  U.  C.     Committee    on     Undergraduate     Work 

(4)  ;  Finance  Committee  Senior  Week. 
Lyston  Sorelle  Black,  Social   Sciences,  Los  Angeles 

AX;   Bench   and   Bar;    Congress,   Treasurer,    (2),   (3);   League  of  the  Republic 

(2),    (3)  ;   Class  Treasurer    (4)  ;    Cast    "Mary    Stuart"    (3)  ;    Blue    and    Gold 

staff;  Chairman  Special  Blue  and  Gold   Committee   (4). 

79 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


Watsonville 

Ferndale 

Berkeley 
Santa  Cruz 
Alameda 


freshmen!   get  wood! 

James  Byers  Black,  Mechanics,  Oakland 

X#;  0NE;  Golden  Bear;  Skull  and  Keys;  A.  E.  and  M.  E. ;  California 
Branch  of  A.  S.  M.  E.  (3);  Polydeucean  Club  (2),  (3),  (4);  Undergraduate 
Students'  Affairs  Committee  (4)  ;  Freshman  Football  Team  (1)  ;  Second  Var- 
sity Football  Team  (2),  (4)  ;  Sophomore  Hop  Committee  (2)  ;  Junior  Prom 
Committee  (3)  ;  Senior  Ball  Committee. 

Wallace  Bradford  Boggs,  Civil  Engineering, 

Los  Amigos;  Civil  Engineering  Association. 

Harry  Peter  Bonnikson,  Agriculture, 
■  Atherton  ;  Agricultural  Club. 

Edna  Boone.  Social  Sciences, 

Winifred  Bowen,  Social  Sciences, 

Dolores  Elizabeth  Bradley,  Natural  Sciences, 

Prytanean ;  Junior  Curtain  Raiser  Cast ;    Chairman    Sports   and 
gram  Committee    (4)  ;   Senior  Advisory  Committee. 

Arthur  Franklin  Bridge,  Mechanics,  Belvedere 

Jeannie  Ellison  Brock,  Social  Sciences,  Redlands 

Rediviva ;  Charter  Day  Committee ;   Managerial   Staff  Woman's 
(4)  ;  Senior  Advisory  Committee. 

Arnold   Thornton    Brown,   Civil   Engineering  Alameda 

2X;  Boat  Club,  Director  (4);  Civil  Engineering  Association;  Captain  Co.  O 
(4). 

Marianne  Glasgow  Brown,  Natural  Sciences, 
K  K  r  ;  Junior  Prom  Committee. 

George  Norman  Browning,  Commerce, 

9  A  X ;   Captain  Co.  P ;  Junior  Curtain  Raiser. 

Roy  H.  Bryson,  Social  Sciences, 

Geoffrey  Armstrong  Buddle,  Mining, 

Abracadabra ;  T  B  n  ;  9  T  ;  Mim  Kaph  Mini ;  President  Camera  Club ;  Freshman 
Track  Team;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff;  A.  S.  U.  C.  Committee  on  Undergraduate 
Work. 

Jennie  Olivette  Bunce,  Social  Sciences, 

Enewah  Club;  Senior  Advisory  Committee. 

80 


Pastimes     Pro- 


Day    Occident 


San  Francisco 


Alameda 

Auckland,   New  Zealand 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Muriel  Estelle  Burnham,  Social  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

KA9;. 

Alfred  Stevens  Burrill,  Social  Sciences,  Yreka 

Acacia ;  Les  Bavards ;   Bench  and  Bar  Law  Club ;  Congress ;  Junior  Farce. 
Selina  Burston,  Social   Sciences,  Berkeley 

Aubrey  Cleo  Butler,  Social  Sciences,  Healdsburg 

Charles  Le  Roy  Butler,  Agriculture,  Oakland 

X  * ;  A  Z  ;  Winged  Helmet ;  Golden  Bear ;  "Big  C"  Society ;  Floor  Manager  Ju- 
nior Prom;  Track  (1),  (2),  (3);  Golf  (4);  Chairman  Pacific  Coast  Interschol- 
astic  Committee ;  Chairman  Students'  Welfare  Committee. 

Raymond  Henry  Butzbach,  Natural  Sciences,  Millville 

Los  Amigos ;  Mim  Kaph  Mim. 

John    P.   Buwalda,  Natural   Sciences,  North  Yakima,  Wash. 

2  AE;  GT 

Floralyn  Cadwell,  Social  Sciences,  Carpinteria 

Laura  Cairns,  Social  Sciences,  Lindsay 

Treble  Clef   (2). 

John  Joseph  Carden,  Jr.,  Natural  Sciences,  Honolulu,  H.  I. 

Henry  Theobald  Carlton,  Mechanics,  Berkeley 

Rifle  Club  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  President  (3);  Rifle  Team  (1),  (3),  (4);  In- 
tercollegiate Gallery  Team  (1),  (3),  (4);  Track  Squad  (2),  (3),  (4);  A.  S. 
U.  C.   Committee  on  Undergraduate  Work;   Finance   Committee   Senior   Week. 

Clarence  Carpenter,   Social   Sciences,  lone 

Sinclair  Ernest  Carpenter,  Civil  Engineering,  Modesto 

TBII;  Freshman  Track  Team;  Winner  of  Punting  Contest  (1). 

Carlos   Newton   Carter,  Agriculture,  Duarte 

Agricultural   Club.  

Morse  Adams  Cartwright,  Natural  Sciences,  Hollywood 

X^;  *A$;  Golden  Bear;  Winged  Helmet;  English  Club;  John  Marshall  Law 
Club;  Cast  Junior  Farce;  Daily  Califomian  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Editor  (4)  ; 
Blue  and  Gold  Staff  (3);  General  Chairman  Sophomore  Hop  Committee; 
Undergraduate  Student  Affairs  Committee  (4)  ;  Permanent  Blue  and  Gold 
Committee;  Pacific  Coast  Interscholastic  Committee  (3);  Extravaganza  Com- 
mittee Senior  Week. 
Sarah   Edith    Chambers,   Social   Sciences,  Berkeley 

Tsoo-Zung  Chang,  Agriculture,  Shanghai,  China 

Elton  Ralph  Charvoz,  Medicine.  Betteravia 

$2K;    AKK;    Harvey  Club.  I 

Harold  Stewart  Chase,  Natural  Sciences,  Santa  Barbara 

B0n;  Mandolin  Club  (1),  (2),  (3);  President   (4);  Varsity  Relay  Team   (1), 
(2)  ;  Junior  Farce  Curtain  Raiser;  Assistant  Manager  Blue  and  Gold;  Freshie 
Glee,  Sophomore  Hop  Committees. 
May  Bensel  Chase,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

K  A  0 ;  Prytanean ;  Class  Vice-President  (4)  ;  Senior  Record  Committee ;  Senior 
Advisory  Committee;   Chairman  Womans    Banquet   Committee;    Welfare   Com- 
mittee. 
Lucy  Hung  Yi  Cheng,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Monlin  Chiang,  Social  Sciences,  Shanghai,  China 

Wa  Chan  Ching,  Chemistry,  Canton,   China 

David  Gustav  William   Christen,  Social  Sciences  Anaheim 

81 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


IN    THE      GYM 


Paul  William  Christman,  Natural  Sciences, 

Edith  Dwight  Clapp,  Letters, 
KA9. 


Pasadena 
Berkeley 


London,  England 
Felt  on 


Robert  Hazeltine  Clark,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

K2;  *A#;  Winged  Helmet;  Senate;  Editor  in  Chief  Blue  and  Gold  (3)  ;  Ju- 
nior Day  Committee ;  Permanent  Blue  and  Gold  Committee ;  Chairman  Decor- 
ation Committee  Senior  Ball. 

Roy  Elwood  Clauson,  Agriculture,  Ontario,  Cal. 

A  Z. 

Montague  Cleeves,  Natural  Sciences, 

David  Lock  Clement,  Mechanics, 

Beverly  Stuart  Clendenin,  Social  Sciences,  Lakeport 

4>2K;  $A$;  Economics  Club;  John  Marshall  Law  Club;  Class  Treasurer  (2); 
Congress ;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff ;  Freshie  Glee  Committee ;  Smoker  Committee 
(2);    Senior   Assembly    Committee;  Students'  Welfare   Committee. 

Louise  Dexter  Cleveland,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Ernest  George  Clewe,   Commerce,  Sonoma 

Z  *  ;  G  N  E  ;  *  B  K  ;  Golden  Bear  ;  Winged  Helmet ;  Mask  and  Dagger ;  Eng- 
lish Club;  President  (4);  Economics  Club;  Class  Treasurer  (2);  House  of 
Rimmon  (1);  Shoemaker's  Holiday  (2);  Nero  (2);  Caesar  and  Cleopatra  (3); 
Mary  Stuart  (3)  ;  Paolo  and  Francesca  (4)  ;  The  Schoolmistress  (2)  ;  Can- 
dida (3);  Capt.  Jinks  of  the  Horse  Marines  (4)  ;  Junior  Farce;  Golden  Jubilee 
Committee  (2);  Junior  Day  Committee;  Rally  Committee  (3);  Extravaganza 
Committee    Senior    Week. 

Harry  Leeds   Coles,  Mining,  San  Francisco 

Del  Rey;  Glee  Club. 

Merton  Clyde  Collins,  Civil  Engineering,  San    Francisco 

Civil  Engineering  Association. 

Donald  Isaac  Cone,  Mechanics,  Berkeley 

Y.  M.  C.  A.;  A.  E.  and  M.  E. 


82 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


William    Harold   Conlin,    Commerce,  San  Francisco 

AT;  Commerce  Club;  Vice-President   (4);  U.  N.  X.;  Senate;   Senior  Banquet 
Committee. 
Russell  Henry  Cooley,   Mechanics,  Oakland 

Extravaganza  Committee   Senior  Week. 
Benjamin  Callister  Corlett,  Agriculture,  Napa 

AKE;  Assistant  Baseball  Manager,  Northern  Trip  (3);  Junior  Informal  Com- 
mittee. 
Everett  Parsons  Cornell,  Agriculture,  Oakland 

Hazel  May  Cotey,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Alice  Crabbe,  Letters,  Pomona 

AX  ft;    Plaudertasche;   A.   W.   S.   Fete  (3);  Senior  Advisory  Committee. 

Axxe  Elizabeth  Craven,  Social  Sciences,  Selma 

Class  Basketball   Team    (3),    (4);   Class  Crew  (3),  (4). 
Isobelle  Marguerite  Creighton,  Social  Sciences,  Honolulu,   H.   I. 

AX  ft;  Women's  Orchestra,  President    (3),    (4). 
Alice    Crooks,    Social    Sciences,  Benecia 

Geori;k  Cullen   Crowe,   Mining,  Alameda 

Mining  Association;  Glee  Club;  Chairman  Pilgrimage  Committee  Senior  Week. 
Robert  Spencer  Cl/rrey,  Agriculture,  Dixon 

<i>  T  A  ;  0  X  E  ;  Skull  and  Keys  ;  Sophomore  Hop  Committee. 

William  Paul  Custer,  Mechanics,  Covina 

Pirates ;    A.    E.   and    M.    E. ;    University  Orchestral  Society. 


Frank  Charles  Czarnecki,  Mechanics, 

A.  E.  and  M.  E. 
Mary  Florence  Connelly,  Social  Sciences, 
Robert  Locke  Cook,  Natural  Sciences, 
Arthur   Burton   Daly.  Civil   Engineering, 

Acacia;   Art  Staff;    1911   Blue  and  Gold. 
Hazel  Rosanna  Daugherty,  Social  Sciences, 
Elizabeth  Adelaide  Davis,  Natural  Sciences, 

Treble  Clef;  Y.  W.  C.  A. 


Oakland 

San  Francisco 

Oakland 

Colusa 

Salinas 
Sonoma 


summer  camp 


S3 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


THE     CALIFORNIAN"  OFFICE 


Sherwin    Bennett   Davis,   Mining, 
2X;  TBII;  GT 


Berkeley 
Berkeley 


Dio  Louis  Dawson,  Natural  Sciences, 

Pyra;  Class  Relay  Team;  Swimming  Meet  (4). 
Marshall  Dawson,  Social  Sciences,  Nashville,  Tenn. 

Senate   (2),   (3)  ;   Bonnheim  Essay  and  Discussion  Prizes  (1);  Peace  Discussion 

Prize  (2). 
Italia  Lillian  Juanita  de  Jarnette,  Social  Sciences         Louisville,  Ky. 

Equal   Suffrage  Club,  Vice-President    (4)  ;    Fencing    Championship     (2),    (3)  ; 

Manager  Fencing  Team  (3)  ;  Captain  Fencing  Team  (3),  (4)  ;  Chairman  Swim- 
ming Committee   (4)  ;   Class  Crew   (1),    (2),    (3)  ;    Finance    Committee    Senior 

Week. 
Augusta  L.  de  Laguna,  Letters,  Oakland 

Blanche  Camille  de  Large,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Harold  de   Normandie,    Mining,  Pasadena 

Kathleen    Devine,    Social    Sciences,  Berkeley 

Treble  Clef   (4). 
Joseph   Aloysius   Dias,  Civil   Engineering,  Oakland 

Civil   Engineering  Association;    Newman  Club;  U.  C.  Rifle  Team  (3),  Manager 

(4),    Captain    (5);    First    Lieutenant  Co.  E  (4)  ;  Freshman  Intercollegiate  Crew; 

Class  Crew   (3),    (4). 
Michael  Joel  Dillman,  Jr.,  Agriculture,  Sacramento 

AKE;  Glee  Club   (3),   (4);  Freshman  Track  Team;  Senior  Swimming  Team; 

Dormitory    Committee     (4)  ;    Hilgard  Memorial  Committee   (4)  ;  Capt.  Co.  B ; 

Extravaganza  Committee. 
Monroe  L.  Dinkelspiel,  Commerce,  Oakland 

Golden  Bear;   English  Club;    Mandolin  Club  (3);  Class  President  (2);  Author 

Junior   Farce;   Editor  Pelican   (4)  ;  Daily    California*,    (2);    Rally    Committee 

(4)  ;   Dormitory  Committee    (3)  ;  Junior    Prom    Committee    (3)  ;     Labor    Day 

Committee  (4)  ;  General  Chairman  Senior  Extravaganza. 
John   Franklin  Dodge,  Mining,  Los  Angeles 

Mining    Association,    Secretary    (3). 
Howard    Thomas    Douglas,    Commerce,  Covina 

*  r  A ;  9  N  E ;  Skull  and  Keys  ;  Captain  Freshman  Track  Team.  , 

84 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Florence  Edith   Doyle,  Natural   Sciences,  Berkeley 

A*;  Prytanean;  Treble  Clef,  Treasurer  (2);  Vice-President  of  A.  W.  S. ;  Cast 
of  Junior  Farce,  Cast  of  "Gondoliers,"  "Erminie,"  and  "Mikado";  Art  Staff  of 
1912  Blue  and  Gold;  Chairman  of  A.  W.  S.  Standing  Social  Committee; 
Sophomore  Hop  Committee ;  Junior  Prom  Committee ;  Senior  Assembly  Com- 
mittee ;  Senior  Extravaganza  Committee. 

Leo  Walter  Doyle,  Civil  Engineering,  Milford 

Pirate. 

George  Pressley  Dozier,  Agriculture,  Oakland 

A  Z  ;   Freshman  Track  Team. 

Theodore  Parker  Dresser,  Jr.,  Mining,  Berkeley 

Earle  Preston   Durley,  Natural   Sciences,  Bisbee,  Ariz. 

A.  E.  and  M.  E. ;  Football  Squad   (2),   (3). 

David  Durst,  Natural  Sciences,  Dunnigan 

Los  Amigos. 

Newton  Bishop  Drury,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

*  A  <p ;  Golden  Bear,  Winged  Helmet ;  Sword  and  Scales ;  John  Marshall  Law 
Club;  English  Club;  Economics  Club;  1912  Debating  Society;  Senate  Debating 
Society;  Secretary  A.  S.  U.  C.  Debating  Council  (3)  ;  President  A.  S.  U.  C.  (4)  ; 
Carnot  Debating  Team  (1),  (2);  Winner  of  Carnot  Medal  (2);  Intercollegiate 
Debating  Team  (1),  (2),  (3);  1912  Debating  Team  (1),  (2);  Senate  Debating 
Team  (2)  ;  Editor  Debating  Annual  (3)  ;  Managing  Editor  Blue  and  Gold  (3)  ; 
General  Chairman  1912  Junior  Day  (3)  ;  Publicity  Committee  First  Interschol- 
astic  Meet  (3)  ;  Permanent  Organization   Committee   (4). 

Jessie  Lucinda  Eagleson,  Natural  Sciences,  Walla  Walla,  Wash. 

Alice  Katherine  Earl.  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

KA0;  Senior  Advisory  Committee;  Undergraduate  Students'  Affairs  Commit- 
tee ;   Senior  Banquet  Committee. 

Martha  Ford  Earl,  Letters,  Oakland 

K  A  9 ;  Art   Staff  Blue  and  Gold. 

Harriet  Martha  Ehrenberg,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

AAA;  Deutscher  Verein,  Secretary  (3),  (4);  Senior  Advisory  Committee;  Se- 
nior Women's  Banquet  Committee;  Managerial  Staff  Women's  Day  Occident 
(4). 

Edwin   Moritz   Einstein,  Commerce,  Fresno 

Golden  Bear;  Glee  Club,  manager  (2),  (3);  President  (4);  English  Club, 
treasurer  (4)  ;  Editor  Daily  Californian  (4)  ;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff  (3)  ;  Gov- 
ernor Senior  Hall  (4)  ;  Chairman  Blue  and  Gold  Advisory  Board  (4)  ;  Rally 
Committee  (3)  ;  Dormitory  Committee  (2)  ;  Chairman  Junior  Farce  Committee 
(3);  Sophomore  Hop  Committee  (2);  General  Committee  Senior  Week;  Se- 
nior  Extravaganza   Committee. 

Amos  William  Elliott,  Agriculture,  Santa   Cruz 

K2;  Winged  Helmet;  Golden  Bear;  Skull  and  Keys;  Glee  Club;  "Big  C"  So- 
ciety, President  (4)  ;  Class  Vice-President  (2)  ;  Athletic  Representative  to 
Executive  Committee;  Varsity  Football  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4),  Captain  (4);  Sub 
Baseball   (2)  ;  Swimming  (3),   (4)  ;  Senior  Ball  Committee. 

Margaret  Estelle  Engle,  Natural  Sciences,  Menomonie,    Wis. 

axq. 

Clinton  William  Evans,  Agriculture,  Pomona 

<p  2  K ;  "Big  C"  Society;  Agricultural  Club;  Freshman  Football  Team;  Fresh- 
man Track  Team;  Varsity  Football  Squad  (1),  (2);  Varsity  Football  Team 
(3),  (4);  General  Chairman  Freshie  Glee;  Chairman  Junior  Informal;  Floor 
Manager  Senior  Ball;  Interscholastic  Circus  Committee,  1911;  Sophomore 
Hop  Committee. 

85 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


MILITARY 

Barton  Harvey  Eveleth,  Civil  Engineering,  Berkeley 

Louise  Relief   Everett,   Natural   Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Mary  Elizabeth  Fairchild,  Natural  Sciences,  Riverside 

Enewah;  Treble  Clef,  Secretary   (3);  Class  Secretary  (2). 
Mabel  Winifred  Farrington,  Social  Sciences,  El  Monte 

AXQ;  Y.  W.  C.  A. ;  Senior  Assembly   Committee ;   A.   W.    S.    Book   Exchange 
Committee;  A  W.  S.  Lost  and  Found    Bureau;    A.    W.    S.    Open    House    Com- 
mittee. 
Jessie  Katherine  Faulkner,  Social  Sciences,  Los  Angeles 

Jewel  Fay,  Social   Sciences,  Porterviile 

Richard  Ferdinand  Felchlin,  Civil  Engineering,  San  Francisco 

TBLT 

Bernard  Roy  Feldenheimer,  Natural  Sciences,  Portland,  Ore. 

William  Warren  Ferrier,  Jr.,  Letters,  Berkeley 

X^;  4>A#;  John  Marshall  Law  Club;  Bonnheim  Discussion  Prize  (2);  Cap- 
tain University  Cadets. 

Ralph  Edward  Feusier,  Mechanics,  San  Francisco 

Atherton;  A.  E.  and  M.  E. ;   Captain  University  Cadets  (4). 

Dorothy  Campbell  Fish,  Natural  Sciences,  Los  Angeles 

A  r ;  Prytanean ;  Y.  W.  C.  A.,  Secretary ;  Treasurer  A.  W.  S. ;  Executive  Com- 
mittee A.  W.  S.;  A.  W.  S.  Students' Affairs  Committee;  Class  Crew  (1),  (2); 
Editor  Woman's  Day  Pelican;  Freshie  Glee  Committee;  Managerial  Staff 
Woman's  Day  Pelican  (4)  ;  Managerial  Staff  Blue  and  Gold  ;  Junior  and 
Senior  Informal  Committees ;  Chairman  Senior  Advisory  Committee ;  Dormi- 
tory Committee ;  Executive  Committee  for  Spring  Festival ;  Chairman  Senior 
Ball  Committee. 

Edwin  Alfred  Fisher,  Commerce,  Berkeley 

Del  Rey;  Economics  Club,  President  (4);  President  Commerce  Club  (4); 
President  Cathay  Club  (3)  ;  Secretary  Senior  Hall  (4)  ;  Cast,  Junior  Farce 
(3);  Cast,  "All  for  a  Rose"   (3). 

Irene  Flanagan,  Natural  Science,  Berkeley 

A  Oil;  Treble  Clef;  Opera  "Erminie" ;  "Nero"  Cast;  Blue  and  Gold  staff; 
Freshie  Glee  Committee;  Sophomore  Informal  Committee;  Junior  Prom  Com- 
mittee. 

Daniel  Joseph  Flanigan, Natural  Sciences,  Eureka 

86 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


•A/  w      #r .,.      7     *    **    .  ,%-• 


SOPHOMORES    GUARDING 

Harold  Augustus  Fletcher,  Natural  Sciences, 
X<£>;   Business   Manager  Occident   (4). 

Byington  Ford,  Letters, 
AKE 

Christopher  Bernhardt  Fox,  Social  Sciences, 

Acacia. 
•Clarence  Lynn  Fraser,  Mechanics, 


Reno,  Nev. 
San  Francisco 
Oakland 
Dinuba 


Walter  George  Frederickson,  Letters,  Berkeley 

Deutscher  Verein,  Treasurer  (4)  ;  Konversations-klub,  Secretary  (2),  (3), 
President  (4)  ;  "Dramatic  Section  of  Deutscher  Verein"  (4)  ;  Cast  Hans 
Sachs  Plays  (3). 

Benjamin  Marsh  Frees,  Natural  Sciences,  Monrovia 

AKK;  "Big  C"  Society;  Tennis  Team  (2),  (3),  (4),  Captain  (3)  ;  Junior  Prom 
Committee;  Chairman  Tennis  Court  Erection  Committee;  Senior  Ball  Com- 
mittee. 

Rose  Fountain,  Social  Sciences,  Los  Angeles 

Eleanor  Carolin  French,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

T  4>  B  ;  Deutscher  Verein. 

Justin   Keyser   Fuller,   Natural   Sciences,  San    Francisco 

Irving  Furlong,  Chemistry,  San  Rafael 

Mim  Kaph  Mini. 

Harry  G.  Gabbert,  Agriculture,  Ventura 

X  ^  ;  Golden  Bear  ;  Skull  and  Keys ;  Winged  Helmet ;  "Big  C  Society,  Secre- 
tary (3),  Vice-President  (3),  President  (4);  President  Junior  Class;  Captain 
Freshman  Track  Team;  Varsity  Track  Team  (1),  (2),  (3),  .(4);  Dormitory 
Committee  (2)  ;  Rally  Committee  (3)  ;  Board  of  Governors,  Senior  Hall  (4)  ; 
Chairman  Interscholastic  Committee  (4)  ;  Executive  Committee  Labor  Day 
(4)  ;  Senior  Ball  Committee. 

George  Augustus  Gallagher,  Civil  Engineering,  San  Francisco 

Edith  Juanita  Garner,  Natural  Sciences,  Lodi 

Enewah. 

31arion  Gay,  Social  Sciences,  Sacramento 

KKT;  Prytanean ;  Y.  W.  C.  A.;  Treble  Clef;  President  Junior  Class;  Jubitee 
Pageant  Committee  (2)  ;  Manager  Woman's  Day  Pelican  (4)  ;  Song  Leader 
A.  W.  S.  (4)  ;  Chairman  Labor  Day  Committee;  General  Senior  Week  Ex- 
travaganza Committee. 

87 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Anson  J.  Gerner,  Civil  Engineering,  Sanger 

Civil  Engineering  Association;    Polydeucean  Club. 

Stephen  Howell  Gester,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

9T 

Eleanor  Grace  Gibson,  Social  Sciences,  Eureka 

ASA 

Ray  Millard  Gidney,  Commerce,  Santa   Barbara 

Dahlonega  Club ;  <pBK;  Economics  Club  (4);  Mandolin  Club  (3),  (4);  Glee 
Club  (1)  ;  Commerce  Club  (4)  ;  University  Orchestra  (1)  ;  El  Circulo  Hispanico; 
Cadet  Band  (1),  (2)  ;  Chairman  Junior  Plug  Committee  (3)  ;  Co-Operative  So- 
ciety Investigation  Committee  (3)  ;  Finance  Committee  Senior  Week. 

Ramon  Augustus  Gilbert,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Harvey  Club. 

Fred  Goldman,  Mechanics,  Berkeley 

Oscar  Goldman,  Mechanics,  Berkeley 

Wallace  Gordon,  Chemistry,  Azusa 

Clifford  Melvin  Goss,  Natural  Sciences,  Oakland 

Del  Rey;  Commerce  Club. 

Donald  Houston  Graham,  Agriculture,  Visalia 

<p2K;    Agricultural  Club,  Secretary  (3),  President   (4);  Dormitory  Committee 

(3). 

Russell  Goodman  Graham,  Agriculture,  San   Francisco 

*T;    Mandolin  Club  (4)  ;    Banjo  Club    (4);    Cast,    House    of    Rimmon     (1)  ; 

Football  Show  (2)  ;    "When  Johnny  Comes  Marching  Home"    (4)  ;    Interschol- 

astic  Circus  (3)  ;    Associate  Editor  Daily  Californian  (2)  ;    Staff  Blue  and  Gold 

(3)  ;    Junior   Prom   Committee. 

William  Joseph  Graham,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Architectural    Association,    Treasurer  (4). 

Emily  Pinkney  Gray,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

Tone  Randolph  Gray,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Harold  Greenberg,  Mechanics,  San   Francisco 

A.  E.  and  M.  E. 

Elmo  Murray  Gregory,  Social  Sciences,  Arbuckle 

Grace  Florence  Griffiths,  Natural  Sciences,  Oakland 

A*. 

Freda  Charlotte  Grimm,  Social  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Elsie  Jeanette  Grover,  Social  Sciences,  San    Francisco 

Elmer  Walker  Gruer,  Chemistry,  Oakland 

Mim  Kaph  Mim;  Member  Chess  Committee  (2),    (3);    Chess    Champion    (1), 

(3),    (4);   Member  Intercollegiate   Chess    Team    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4);    Captain 

(3). 

Alfred  Victor  Guillou,  Mechanics,  Berkeley 

TBII;  A.  E.  and  M.  E.,  Vice-President  (4). 

Camillus  Nelson  Hackett,  Letters,  Oakland 

English  Club,  President  (4)  ;  Author  Junior  Curtain  Raiser ;  Literary  Editor 
Occident  (3);  Blue  and  Gold  Staff;  Blue  and  Gold  Permanent  Committee; 
Senior  Extravaganza  Committee ;  Senior   Record   Committee. 

John  Sanford  Halbert,  Civil  Engineering,  Oakland 

SX;    TBII;  Vice-President  Civil   Engineering  Association. 

John  Franklin  Hale,  Natural  Sciences,  Marysville 

KS;  "Big  C"  Society;  Freshman  Track  Team  (1);  Varsity  Track  Team  (1), 
(2),  (3),  (4). 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


William    Fred   Hanell,   Mining,  San  Francisco 

Mary  Grace  Hamilton,  Letters,  Sacramento 

2K;  Prytanean;  Y.  W.  C.  A.;  Sports  and  Pastimes,  Vice-President  (4); 
Kant  Club,  President;  Class  Secretary  (4);  Basketball  Class  Team  (1),  (2), 
(3),  (4);  Class  Crew  (2),  (3);  Manager  of  Boating  (3);  Manager  Woman's 
Day  Occident  (4);  Chairman  A.  W.  S.  Mass  Meeting  Committee;  A.  S.  U.  C. 
Committee  on  Undergraduate  Work;  Senior  Advisory  Committee. 
Harold  Bernard  Ham  mill,  Civil  Engineering,  Roseville 

tbii. 

Fred  V.   Hammerly,   Mining,  San  Francisco 

George  Dinsmore  Hansen,  Agriculture,  Alton 

<pK^;  AZ;  Skull  and  Keys;  "Big  C"  Society;  Freshman  Football  Team; 
Varsity  Football  Sub  (1),  (2),  (3);  Varsity  Football  (4);  Pilgrimage  Com- 
mittee Senior  Week. 

Myron  Wilfred  Harris,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

2  N ;  Skull  and  Keys ;  Winged  Helmet ;  Sophomore  Hop  Committee ;  Fresh- 
man Football  Team;  Varsity  Football  Team  (1),  (2),  (3);  Varsity  Baseball 
Team    (2)  ;   All   American  Rugby  Team  (2). 

Ormeida  Curtis  Harrison,  Social  Sciences, 

Teresa  Ramona  Harrison,  Letters, 

Mandolin  Club;  Assembly  Committee. 

Emilie  Evelyn  Harrold,  Natural  Sciences, 

KKT;    Prytanean;    Treble    Clef;    Secretary  A. 

Lynn   Newton   Hart,   Natural   Sciences, 


Battle  Creek,  Mich. 
San   Francisco 

Oakland 
W.   S. 

Santa  Rosa 


Senior 


George  Cleveland  Haun,  Civil  Engineering, 

Harold  Eastman  Haven,  Social  Sciences, 

*  A  0  ;    Senate ;    Junior    Farce ;    Chairman 
Ball. 

Florence  de  Brenta  Haynes,  Social  Sciences, 

Finance  Committee  A.  S.  U.  C. ;  Blue  and  Gold  Managerial  Staff ;  Swim- 
ming Club;  Literary  Board  Occident  (2);  Woman's  Day,  Cal.  (2);  Chairman 
Reception  Committee  Senior  Ball ;  Senior  Advisory  Committee. 


San    Francisco 
San  Francisco 
Arrangement      Committee 

San  Francisco 


AT    THE    SWIMMING    POOL 


89 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Sidney   Ralph   Heger,  Social   Sciences,  San  Francisco 

William    Simcoe  Heger,  Jr.,  Mechanics,  Tiburon 

AT  ft;  Class  Crew  (2)  ;  Managing  Staff  Blue  and  Gold. 
Walter  Stein   Heller,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Myrtle  Agnes  Hendie,  Natural  Sciences,  Eureka 

Adele  Frances  Henry,  Social   Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Treble    Clef;    Newman    Club;    Women's  Day   Calif orman   (2). 
Alice  May  Hiestand,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

ITB<I>;  Prytanean;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff,    1912;    Junior    Day    Committee;    Hop 

Committee ;    Senior   Advisory   Committee ;    Extravaganza    Committee. 

George  Harrison  Higbee,  Jr.,  Agriculture,  Berkeley 

Clara  Hinze,  Social   Sciences,  Los  Gatos 

Marion  Elizabeth  Hitchcock,  Natural  Sciences,  Hanford 

AXQ 

Edith  Lillian   Hoag,  Social  Sciences,  Ukiah 

Enewah ;  Senior  Advisor  Y.  W.  C.  A.,  3rd  and  4th  years. 
Arne  Knud  Bours  Hoisholt,  Social  Sciences,  Stockton 

2  X ;    6  X  E  ;    Deutsche   Verein  ;    Die  Plaudertasche  ;    Mandolin    Club ;     English 

Club;    University   Orchestra,   Secretary-Treasurer;    Editor   California    Occident; 

Lieutenant    Cadets ;    Extravaganza    Committee. 
George  Thomas   Holbrook,   Commerce,  Berkeley 

Laura  Eugenie  Holmes,  Natural  Sciences,  Tucson,  Ariz. 

Domestic   Economy    Club,    Secretary  (4). 
Henry  Leopold  Holzberg,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Harvey   Club;    Konversations   Klub;  Les   Bavards,   President    (1),    (2). 
Esther   May  Hood,  Letters,  Gold  Run 

William  Homer  Hooker,  Civil  Engineering,  Redlands 

Harry  Heywood   House,   Mining,  Riverside 

0  S  ;    Mandolin   Club ;    Mining  Association. 
William  Harvey  Housh,  Jr.,  Social  Sciences,  Los  Angeles 


junior   plug 


90 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


SKULL    AND    KEYS    RUNNING 


Donna  Hawthorne  Hubbard,  Letters,  Los  Angeles 

Senior    Advisory    Committee. 

Alfred  Huber,  Jr.,  Civil   Engineering,  Berkeley 

Goldie  California  Hulbert,  Social  Sciences,  Del  Rey 

Aldebaran. 

Hazel   Helena   Hund,   Letters,  Ventura 

Newman  Club,  Secretary  (3)  ;  Staff  Woman's  Day  Calif  or  nian  (3)  ;  Senior 
Advisory  Committee;  Senior  Women's  Banquet  Committee;  Chairman  A.  W. 
S.  Rooms  Committee ;  Junior  Farce  Committee ;   Labor   Day   Committee. 

Edith  Lewis  Hunt,  Natural  Sciences,  Alameda 

Margaret  Mae  Hurley,  Social  Sciences,  Phoenix,  Ariz. 

A  0  n ;  Newman  Club,  Secretary  (4)  ;  Book  Exchange  Committee  (A.  W.  S.)  ; 
Senior  Advisory  Committee ;    Senior  Women's   Banquet  Committee. 

Norm\n   Clay  Hutt,  Social   Sciences,  Berkeley 

KA. 

Leland  Leroy  Hyde,  Commerce,  Dixon 

Unity;  Economics  Club;  Commerce  Club, Vice-President  (4)  ;   Freshman  Track. 

Edwin  Ambler  Ingham,  Civil  Engineering,  San   Fernando 

Abracadabra;  TBLT;  Civil  Engineering  Association,  President  (4);  Basketball 
(3). 

Raymond  Clifford  Ingram,  Agriculture,  Irvington 

2N;  Winged  Helmet;  Skull  and  Keys;  Golden  Bear;  Freshman  Crew;  Class 
Crew  (2);  Associate  Editor  Daily  Calif ontian;  Sophomore  Hop  Committee; 
Blue  and  Gold  Advisory  Committee ;  Chairman  Rushing  Agreement  Commit- 
tee; Manager  Blue  and  Gold;  Chairman  Finance  Committee  Senior  Week. 

Eugene  Ireland,  Mining,  Ventura 

Reuben  Ray  Irvine,  Mining,  San  Francisco 

©S. 

Annie  Ethel  Isaacs,  Social  Sciences, 

Hazel  Claire  Jarvis,  Natural  Sciences, 
Copa  de  Oro;   Chemistry   Fiends. 

Henry  Eugene  Jackson,  Commerce, 

91 


Sacramento 
Fortuna 

Alameda 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Louis  McCrory  Jackson,  Agriculture,  Berkeley 

B9n;  English  Club;  Occident  Staff  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Blue  and  Gold  Staff 
(3). 

Frederick  William  Jacobs,  Mechanics,  San   Francisco 

Cercle  Franqais;    Polydeucean  Club;.  1st  Lientenant  Co.  K. 

Leslie  Louis  Jacobs,   Social  Sciences,  Oroville 

Elliott  Johnson,  Commerce,  Oakland 

News  Editor  Daily  Calif omian;  General  Committee  Senior  Week;  Extravagan- 
za Committee. 

Carl   Rudy   Johnston,   Agriculture,  Berkeley 

Agricultural  Club,  Vice-President  (4)  ;  Special  Committee  on  Undergraduate 
Work;   Pilgrimage   Committee   Senior  Week. 

George   Ira  Johnstone,.  Natural   Sciences,  Berkeley 

Edna  Mae  Jones,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

Gilbert  Lawrence  Jones,  Social  Sciences,  Fruitvale 

Paul  Sidney  Jones,  Civil  Engineering,  San   Jose 

Pirate;    Civil    Engineering    Association;  First  Lieut.  Co.  A  (4). 

Mildred  Washburn  Jordan,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

AXO;  Prytanean ;  Class  Vice-President  (4);  Blue  and  Gold  (3);  Woman's 
Day  Pelican  Staff  (4)  ;  Chairman  Dormitory  Committee  (3),  (4)  ;  Senior  Ad- 
visory  Committee. 

Louis  Elwood  Joses,  Civil  Engineering,  lone 

Herbert  Charles  Kelly,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Diego 

$2K;  *A<I>;  Golden  Bear;  Winged  Helmet,  Sword  and  Scales;  Economics 
Club;  "Big  C"  Society;  Commerce  Club;  Congress;  Rally  Committee  (3); 
Chairman  (4)  ;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff  (3)  ;  Coxswain  Freshman  Crew  (1)  ;  Var- 
sity Crew   (3)  ;  Debating  Council   (4)  ;  Bonnheim  Discussion   (2),   (3),  (4). 

Harrison  Carlos  Kelsey,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

League  of  Republic  (2);  Congress;  Class  Debating  Society   (2). 

Gerald   Driscoll  Kennedy,   Agriculture,  San    Francisco 

B9II;  AZ;  Skull  and  Keys;  U.  N.  X.;  Agricultural  Club,  Secretary;  Newman 
Club;  Football  Squad  (2),  (3),  (4). 

Pearl  Margaret  Kenyon,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Enewah;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff;  Senior  Advisory  Committee;  Senior  Ball  Com- 
mittee. 

Katherine  Casey  Kerns,  Social  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

William  Francis  John  Kerr,  Natural  Sciences,  Dorris 

N2N;  BKA;  Harvey  Club  (2),  (3);  President  (3);  Cabinet  Y.  M.  C.  A. 
(3)   Vice-President  (4)  ;  Class  Crew  (3). 

Nellie  Kerrigan,   Natural   Sciences,  Eureka 

Charlotte  Frances  Kett,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Anna  Rodman  Kidder,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

AAA;  Prytanean;  First  Vice-President  of  Class  (3)  ;  Second  Vice-President 
of  A.  W.  S. ;  President  of  Sports  and  Pastimes  Association  (4)  ;  Class  Basket- 
ball Team  (2),  (3),  (4);  Chairman  Senior  Advisory  Committee;  Chairman  of 
Boarding  House  Committee   (4). 

Florence  Amelia  Kierulf,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Helen    Kinell,   Social    Sciences,  Berkeley 

Deutscher  Verein. 


92 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Tracy  Barrett  Kittredge,  Letters,  Antioch 

Atherton ;  John  Marshall  Law  Club;  Congress,  Clerk  (2);  Speaker  pro  tern 
(3)  ;  Speaker  (4)  ;  Board  of  Governors  Boalt  Hall  (4)  ;  Board  of  Governors 
Historical  Association  (4)  ;  Secretary  Debating  Council  (4)  ;  Intercollegiate 
Debating  Team  (4)  ;  Carnot  Team  (3),  (4)  ;  Bonnheim  Contest  (3)  ;  Congress 
Team  (1),  (2),  (3);  Blue  and  Gold  Staff  (3;  Associate  Editor  Daily  Califor- 
nian  (2);  Intercollegiate  Chess  Team  (1);  Senior  Ball  Committee;  Senior 
Record  Committee  (4). 

Lily  Kong,  Natural   Sciences,  Berkeley 

Harrold  Brook  Knowles,  Social  Sciences,  Alameda 

ATfi;   John   Marshall   Law   Club. 

Joseph  Ernest  Kreling,  Civil  Engineering,  San  Francisco 

Ida  May  Kriegel,  Social   Sciences,  Los  Alamos 

Lowell  Gaynor  Krigbaum.   Mining,  San  Francisco 

U.    N.    X. ;    Mining    Association ;    Chairman  Senior  Banquet  Committee. 

Olive  Rebekah  La  Clair.  Natural  Sciences  Ontario,  Cal. 

AXfi;  Senior  Advisory  Committee ;  Senior  Women's  Hall  Furnishing  Com- 
mittee. 

Charles  Joachim  Lamp,  Civil  Engineering  San   Francisco 

Hazel  Land,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

Oscar  William  Lanzendorf,  Civil  Engineering,  San  Francisco 

Jennie  Larkin,  Social   Scienres,  Berkeley 

Andrew  Werner  Lawson,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

$K2;   0  T. 

Harry  Rogers  Lawton,  Commerce,  Berkeley 

*  r  A ;  e  N  E  ;  Skull  and  Keys ;  Freshman  Football  Team ;  Freshie  Glee  and 
Junior  Prom  Committees;  Floor  Manager  Junior  Informal;  General  Committee 
Senior   Week ;    Arrangements   Committee  Senior  Ball. 

Lillian  Bentelsen  Leale.  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Chairman  Book  Exchange  (4)  ;  Senior  Advisory  Committee  (4)  ;  Chairman 
Arrangements    Committee   Senior   Women's   Banquet. 

Josephine  Le  Conte.  Letters,  Berkeley 

T*B;  Cast  of  Junior  Curtain-Raiser  (3);  Chairman  Sophomore  Banner  Com- 
mittee ;   Senior  Advisory   Committee. 

Thomas  Joseph  Ledwich,  Social  Sciences,  Grass  Valley 

Atherton ;  $  A  <t> ;  President  of  Freshman  Debating  Society ;  John  Marshall  Law 
Club;  Congress  Debating  Society;  Alternate  Congress  Team  (2);  Bonnheim 
Dissertation  Prize  (4);  Students'  Welfare  Committee;  Pilgrimage  Committee 
Senior  Week. 

Richard  Arthur  Lee,  Natural  Sciences,  Fulton 

Cecil  Viola   Levy,   Social   Sciences,  San   Francisco 

Paul  Jack  Levy,  Social  Sciences,  San   Francisco 

Freshman  Track  Team;  Varsity  Track  Team  (2),  (3). 

Gladys    Marie  Lewis.   Social   Sciences,  Berkeley 

IIB<p;  Treble  Clef;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff;  Cast  of  "The  Gondoliers";  Recep- 
tion Committee  Senior  Ball. 

Velma  Etta  Lewis.   Natural   Sciences,  Gridley 

Women's  Orchestra ;  Women's  Mandolin  and  Guitar  Club,  Secretary-Treasurer 
(3),  President   (4). 

Anna  Babette  Liebenthal,  Social  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Charter  Day  Committee. 

93 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


Edward  Conant  Livingston,  Natural  Sciences,  Santa  Ana 

Dahlonega;  Class  President  (2);  Class  Debating  Team  (1),  (2);  Blue  and 
Gold  Staff  (3). 

Ethel  Beatrice  Lockhart,  Natural  Sciences,  Santa  Rosa 

Rediviva ;  Chemistry  Fiends,  Treasurer  (3),  (4):  Class  Vice-President  (2); 
Class  Basketball  Team  (2),  (3);  Blue  and  Gold  Staff;  Managerial  Staff  Wo- 
man's Day  Pelican  (3)  ;  Junior  Day  Committee  (2)  ;  Senior  Advisory  Commit- 
tee;  Senior  Hall  Building  Fund  Committee;  Welfare  Committee;  Arrangements 
Committee   Woman's   Day    (3). 

Mabel  Margaret  Lockhart,  Social  Sciences,  Santa  Rosa 

Rediviva ;   Chemistry  Fiends. 

Wat   Po  Loo.   Mechanics, 

Albert  Jose  Loubet,  Natural   Sciences, 


Elizabeth    Lowry,    Social    Sciences, 
A  HA. 


Canton,  China 
Mazatlan,  Mexico 
Oakland 


Ferndale 


Berkeley 
Berkeley 
Oakland 
Berkeley 


X.  John  Lund,   Mining, 

Mining    Association,    Vice-President   (4). 

Pearl  Antoinette  Lutzi,  Natural  Sciences, 

Roy   Phillip  Lutzi,   Mechanics, 

Emma  Caroline  McClelland,  Social  Sciences, 

Ethel  Rushton  McConnell,  Natural  Sciences, 

Women's    Mandolin   Club ;    Refreshment  Committee  Senior  Assembly. 
Emily  Kitchell  McIntyre,  Letters,  Sacramento 

Kathryn    McKee,    Social    Sciences,  Berkeley 

Albert  Lloyd  McDermont,  Social  Sciences,  Long  Beach 

Ralph    Campbell   McGee,  Social   Sciences,  Sutter  Creek 

A  A*;  Golden  Bear;  Winged  Helmet;  "Big  C"  Society;  Y.  M.  C.  A.  President 
(4);  A.  S.  U.  C.  Vice-President  (4);  Senate;  Freshman  Track  Team;  Varsity 
Track  Team   (3);  Senior  Banquet  Committee. 


INTERSCHOLASTIC    CIRCUS 


94 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


Covelo 
Berkeley 

San   Francisco 


GLEE     CLUB    IN     EUROPE 

Reynolds  McHenry,  Civil  Engineering,  San  Francisco 

Civil  Engineering  Association;  Captain  and  Quartermaster  (3),  (4),  U.  C. 
Cadets. 

Ezekial  Denman  McNear,  Commerce.  Petaluma 

A  A  $ ;  President  Economics  Club  (4)  ;  Captain  Company  F ;  Freshman  Track 
Team;  Varsity  Track  Team  (2),  (3)  ;  Cast  The  Stubbornness  of  Geraldine  (1)  ; 
The  House  of  Rimmon  (1);  The  Shoemaker's  Holiday  (2);  Caesar  and  Cleo- 
patra (3)  ;  Junior  Farce  (3)  ;  Paolo  and  Francesca  (4)  ;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff; 
Junior  Prom  Committee;  Military  Ball  Committee  (3);  Finance  Committee 
Senior  Week. 

Elvira  Jennie  Minnette  Mackay,  Natural  Sciences, 

Minnette   Mac  Kay,   Natural  Sciences, 
Y.  W.  C.  A. ;  Sprechverband. 

Harry  Henderson  Macpherson,  Civil  Engineering, 

KA;  Freshman  Track;  Varsity  Track  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Freshie  Glee  Com- 
mittee;   Sophomore   "C"   Committee;  Pilgrimage  Committee   Senior  Week. 

Stephen  Malatesta.  Mechanics,  Boston,  Mass. 

IIK<p;  "Big  C  Society;  A.  E.  and  M.  E. :  Freshman  Crew;  Varsity  Crew 
(2)  ;  Varsity  Crew  (3)  ;  Football  Squad  (3),  (4)  ;  Pilgrimage  Committee  Se- 
nior Week. 

Chester  Thomas  Malcolm,  Civil  Engineering, 
2  A  E. 

Christine  Agnes  Malloch,  Natural  Sciences, 

Percy  Marks,  Social  Sciences, 

Eugene  K.   Martin,  Natural  Sciences, 

Architectural    Association. 
Ivan   G.    Martin,    Social    Sciences, 
Leland  Staneord  Martin,  Natural  Sciences, 
Chas.  Franklin  Masten,  Natural  Sciences, 

Del  Rey. 
Francis  Irwin  Maslin.  Mechanics,  Alameda 


Oakland 

Visalia 
Ukiah 
Charlottenburg,  Germany 

St.  Helena 
Porterville 
Klamath  Falls,  Ore. 


95 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


John  Wesley  Masten,  Agriculture,  Corona 

Arba  John    Mathews,    Mechanics,  Los  Angeles 

Alice  Freeland  Maxwell,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

ASA;  Chemistry  Fiends;  Harvey  Club;  Reception  Committee   Senior  Ball. 

Myrtle  Duncan  Maxwell,  Natural  Sciences,  Oakland 

Thomas    Clay    Mayhew,    Agriculture,  Chino 

Casimir ;  AZ;  Agricultural  Club. 

Rey    Maynard,   Agriculture,  San  Jose 

Bachelordon;  U.  N.  X.;  "Big  C"  Society;  Freshman  Crew;  Varsity  Crew   (3); 

Captain  Varsity  Crew  (4)  ;  Senior  Ball  Committee. 

Thomas  Chase  Mead,  Civil  Engineering,  Berkeley 

Bernhard  Martin   Mehl,  Mechanics,  Orland 

Y.  M.  C.  A. ;  A.  E.  and  M.  E.. 

Gustave  Frederick  Michelbacher,  Commerce,  Riverside 

Nelson  Scott  Mickel,  Agriculture,  Ventura 

A  Z ;  Agricultural  Club ;  Congress ;  Chess  Club ;  Junior  Farce  Committee ;  Var- 
sity Chess  Team  (3). 
Bessie    Maud    Miller,    Social    Sciences,  Belton,  Texas 

Laurel  Revel  Miller,  Agriculture,  Los  Angeles 

AT;  Golden  Bear;  Winged  Helmet;  Secretary    of    A.    S.    U.    C. 

Manager  Occident  (2)  ;  Assistant  Manager  Daily  Califomian  (3) 

Finance  Committees  Senior  Week. 
Louisa  Miller,  Social  Sciences, 
Rachel  Katherine  Miller,  Social  Sciences, 

KAO;  Prvtanean;  Y.  W.  C.  A.  (2),  (3) 

(3). 
Sadie  Vesta  Milliken,  Social   Sciences, 

Copa  de  Oro. 
Marie  Kathryn  Mitchell,  Social  Sciences, 

Newman  Club ;  Women's  Stringed  Orchestra,  Leader    (4)  ;   Woman's  Day  Peli- 
can Staff;  Women's  Dormitory  Committee;   Senior  Women's   Building  Finance 

Committee ;  Pilgrimage  Committee  Senior  Week. 
Kenneth  Crocker  Mohrhardt,  Commerce,  Berkeley 

Commerce  Club,   Secretary   (3),   President  (4);  Congress;  Captain  Co.  H. 
Robert  Ansley  Monroe,  Civil  Engineering, 

Freshman  Track  Team;  Rifle  Team  (1),    (3). 
Edward  Leroy  Moore,  Natural  Sciences, 
Grace  Moore,  Social  Sciences, 

Y.  W.  C.  A.  Cabinet. 
Hilda    Morgan,    Social    Sciences, 
Alice  Fremont  Morse,  Natural  Sciences, 

Enewah;  Chemistry  Fiends;  Class  Secretary    (2);   Senior  Advisory   Committee; 

Student  Welfare  Committee;  A.  S.  U.   C.   Committee  on   Undergraduate   Work; 

Pilgrimage  Committee  Senior  Week. 
Jean   Marjorie  Mosher,  Natural  Sciences,  Reno,    New 

Senior  Women's   Banquet. 
Emile  Francis  Muheim,  Mining,  San   Francisco 

Ora  Emily  Muir,  Social  Sciences,  Willits 

r$B;   Y.   W.   C.   A.,   Cabinet    (3);   First  Vice-President  (4);  Managerial  Staff 

Women's  Day  Pelican  (3),  and  Occident  (4)  ;  A.  W.  S.  Social  Committee  (4)  ; 

Senior  Advisory  Committee. 
Robert   Wallace   Muller,   Mechanics,  Tehama 


(3)  ;    Acting 
General  and 


Oakland 
Piedmont 
President    (4)  ;    Mandolin    Club    (2), 

Mendocino 

Santa  Cruz 


Willow  Ranch 

Sanv  Francisco 
Berkeley 

Berkeley 
San  Francisco 


96 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Penelope  Lacy  Murdoch,  Social  Sciences,  Los  Angeles 

r<I>B;  Prytanean;  Agricultural  Association  (2),  (3),  (4);  Secretary  (3);  Y. 
W.  C.  A.  Cabinet  (3),  (4);  Senior  Advisory  Committee  (3),  (4);  Senior  As- 
sembly Committee  (4);  Extravaganza  Selection  Committee  Senior  Week; 
Chairman  Hearst  Hall  Committee  (4)  ;  Editorial  Staff  Women's  Day  Pelican 
(4). 

Elmo  Neil  Murphy,  Civil  Engineering,  Ukiah 

Secretary  Civil  Engineering  Association  (4);  Freshman  Track  Team;  First 
Lieut.  Co.  D. 

Harold  Myer,  Electrical  Engineering,  San  Francisco 

A.  E.  and  M.  E. ;  Freshman  Track  Team. 

Kaizo  Naka,  Natural  Sciences,  Kurume,  Japan 

Hans  Nathan,  Natural  Sciences,  Austin,  Texas 

Architectural  Association. 

Owen  Benjamin  Nelson,  Chemistry,  Riverside 

Mim  Kaph  Mim ;  Freshman  Track  Team. 

Yargen    Nelson,   Civil    Engineering,  Crockett 

Herbert   Stanley    Newman,   Commerce,  Anaheim 

Editor  University  of  California   Calendar   (4). 

Leslie  John   Nickels,  Agriculture,  San   Francisco 

Alice  Nickerson,  Letters,  Redlands 

AXfi;  Masquerade  Committee  (4);  Senior  Advisory  Committee;  Senior  Wo- 
man's Finance  Committee. 

Edward  Douglass  Nickerson,  Civil  Engineering,  Redlands 

Bachelordon ;  Civil  Engineering  Association ;  Freshman  Football  Team ;  Sopho- 
more  Informal   Committee. 

Lawrence  Nicol,  Natural  Sciences,  Stockton 

A  X ;  Congress. 

Aha  Margaret  Nielsen,  Social  Sciences,  Oxford,  Neb. 

Der  Deutscher  Verein ;  President  of  Art  History  Circle  (3),  (4);  President 
Der  Deutscher  Zirkel  (4);  Secretary  (3);  A.  W.  S.  Executive  Committee; 
Spring   Festival   Committee ;    Senior  Advisory  Committee. 

Aron  Christian  Nielsen,  Civil  Engineering,  Selma 

Civil   Engineering  Association. 


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WOMAN  S     DAY     BOAT    RACE 


97 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


Rose  Annetta   Nigg,  Natural  Sciences,  Covina 

Cranford ;  Sprechverband. 

Walter   Hall   Nixon,  Agriculture,  Santa  Barbara 

AZ;  Agricultural  Club,  President  (4);  Blue  and  Gold  Staff  (3). 


Berkeley 

North  Fork 
Sebastopol 

Exeter 

Piedmont 

Berkeley 
Berkeley 

Sacramento 

San  Francisco 

Berkeley 


Grace  Marion   Noble,  Social   Sciences, 
Ralph  Ernest  Noddin,  Natural  Sciences, 
Walter  Charles  Nolan,  Natural  Sciences, 
Dahlonega  Club. 

Mildred  Elvira  Norcross,  Social  Sciences, 
2K. 

Eva  Nordwell,  Social  Sciences, 

KA9. 

Benjamin   Norton,  Mechanics, 
Norma  Noteware,  Letters, 

Book  Exchange   (2),   (3);   Senior  Assembly   (4). 
George   Edward   Noyes,   Mechanics, 

Unity;   Senior  Ball   Committee. 
Franklyn   William   Oatman,  Mining, 

Los   Amigos ;    Mining   Association. 
Ellen  Frances  Ord,  Agriculture, 

r  <I>  B ;   Prytanean ;   Women's  Mandolin  and  Guitar  Club,  President    (3)  ;   New- 
man Club;  A.  W.  S.  Social  Committee  (2),   (3). 
To  mas   Fitch   Orr,  Commerce,  Lemoore 

Die  Plaudertasche  (3);  International  Club;    Commerce   Club;    Circulo   Hispani- 

co. 

Chesley  Ellis  Osborn,  Mechanics,  Turlock 

©  S ;  A.   E.  and   M.  E. ;   A.   I.   E. ;   Senior  Assembly  Committee. 
Annis  Myrtle  Ostrander,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

Charles  Douglas  Yelverton  Ostrom,  Civil  Engineering     San  Francisco 

Secretary   Civil   Engineering  Association  (5)  ;  Captain  Co.  L  (4),  Colonel  (5)  ; 
Military  Ball  Committee  (4). 
Edwin  Clarence  Overholtzer,  Letters,  Glendora 

Ralph   Warren    Palmer,   Commerce,  Alameda 

Harry  Hutchinson  Parker,  Mechanics,  Oakland 

John   Joseph    Parker,  Agriculture,  Visalia 

<l>  K  ^ ;  Skull  and  Keys ;  Agricultural  Club ;  Newman  Club. 

John  Bonte  Parkinson,  Natural  Sciences,  Sacramento 

Junior  Farce  Cast ;  Reception  Committee  Senior  Week. 

Charles  Willis  Payne,  Social  Sciences.  Los  Angeles 

2N;  Vice-President  Class  (3);  Assistant  Yell  Leader;  Chairman  Junior  Prom 
Arrangements  Committee. 

Edith  Ella  Pence,  Social  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

*BK;  Prytanean;  English  Club;  Deutscher  Verein ;  Y.  W.  C.  A.;  Plauder- 
tasche, President  (4);  Class  Vice-President  (1);  Class  Secretary  (3);  Class 
Basketball  Team  (1),  (2),  (3);  German  Play  Casts  (1),  (2),  (3);  Daily  Cali- 
fornian  (3),  (4)  ;  Editor  Women's  Day  Calif omian  (4)  ;  Occident  Editorial 
Staff  (2),  (3),  (4);  Occident  Managerial  Staff  (2);  Manager  Women's  Day 
Occident  (3);  Women's  Day  Pelican  (1),  (3);  Blue  and  Gold  Staff;  Junior 
Day  Committee ;  Senior  Assembly  Committee ;  Chairman  A.  W.  S.  Rooms  Com- 
mittee ;  A.  W.  S.  Students'  Affairs  Committee ;  A.  W.  S.  Executive  Committee 
(4)  ;  Dormitory  Committee ;  Undergraduate  Work  Committee  (4)  ;  Senior 
Record    Committee ;    Permanent   Organization   Committee. 

98 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


INTERCLASS    CREW    RACE 


Louise  Kemper  Perkins,  Natural  Sciences, 
II  B* 


Nacogdoches,  Texas 


Amanda  Edith  Peterson,  Social  Sciences,  San   Luis   Obispo 

Ferd  Somers  Peterson,  Natural  Sciences,  Belvedere 

*T;     Glee     Club     (2),     (3);     President  (4);  De  Koven  Club  (2),   (3),  (4); 

Senior  Men's  Banquet  Committee. 
Helen    Marie   Phelan,   Social    Sciences,  Watsonville 

2  K ;  Newman  Club ;  Circulo  Hispanico ;    Senior  Advisory   Committee. 

Dorothy  Distro  Phillips,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Junior  Farce;  Woman's  Day  Pelican  (4);  Senior  Advisory  Committee;  Senior 
Records    Committee;    Extravaganza  Committee;   Women's   Masquerade   (4). 

Allen  Cleveland  Phelps,  Social  Sciences,  Boulder,   Col. 

Lawrence  Miller  Phillips,  Social  Sciences,  Hanford 

Carl  Albert  Phleger,  Commerce,  Sacramento 

*  A  9 ;  Golden  Bear ;  Winged  Helmet ;  Skull  and  Keys ;  Chairman  Intercollegiate 
Agreement  Committee ;  Freshman  Track  Team ;  Freshman  Football  Team ; 
Varsity  Football  Team  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4),  Australian  Football  Trip  (3). 

Herman  Horatius  Phleger,  Natural  Sciences,  Sacramento 

<p  A  0  ;  *  A  $ ;  Golden  Bear ;  Winged  Helmet ;  Skull  and  Keys ;  Sword  and 
Scales;  English  Club;  "Big  C"  Society;  Substitute  Varsity  Football  Team  (2), 
(3);  Varsity  Football  Team  (4);  John  Marshall  Law  Club;  Senate  President 
(4)  ;  Alternate  Intercollegiate  Debating  Team  (3)  ;  Intercollegiate  Debating 
Team  (4)  ;  Associate  Editor  Daily  Calif ornian  (2)  ;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff;  Floor 
Manager  Sophomore  Hop;  Dormitory  Committee  (2),  (3);  Rally  Committee 
(4)  ;  General  Chairman  Labor  Day  (4)  ;  Governor  Senior  Hall ;  General 
Chairman    Senior  Week. 

Ruth  Elce  Pitman,  Social  Sciences,  National  City 

Cranford  Club;  Y.  W.  C.  A.;  Class  Basketball  Team  (1);  Senior  Advisory 
Committee. 

James  Frederick  Pollard,  Mechanics,  San  Bernardino 

*S  K;  T  B  n  ;  A.  E.  and  M.  E.,  Treasurer  (3),  (4)  ;  President  (4)  ;  Daily  Cali- 
f ornian  Staff  (1),  (2),  (3)  ;  Managing  Editor  Blue  and  Gold;  Chairman  Sopho- 
more Informal  Committee ;   Pilgrimage  Committee  Senior  Week. 

George  Louis  Popert,  Natural  Sciences,  Sacramento 

Congress;  International  Club;  Class  Treasurer    (3). 

99 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


Emma  Louise  Post,  Social   Sciences,  Los  Gatos 

Mildred  E.   Porter,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

K  K  r ;     Prytanean  ;     Y.     W.     C    A.,  Chairman  Membership  Committee  :  Junior 
Farce;    Sophomore   Hop   Committee;  Senior  Advisory  Committee. 
Leta  Pearl  Potter,  Natural  Science,  Saneer 

Y.  W,  C.  A. 
Clarence    Merle    Price,    Mechanics.  Highland 

2X;    Skull    and    Keys;    Varsity    Substitute   Football    Team    (3). 
Nathan  Tapley  Putnam.  Civil  Engineering,  Riverside 

John  Robertson  Quinn,  Agriculture.  Richgrove 

Bachelordon;  Golden  Bear;  U.  N.  X. ;  Agricultural  Club;  Class  Yell  Leader 
(2),  (3),  (4);  Varsity  Yell  Leader  (4);  Football  Squad  (2),  (3);  Organiza- 
tion Committee  Labor  Day;  Permanent  Organization  Committee  Senior  Week; 
Captain  Co.  E. 

Edna  Margaret  Quay,  Letters,  Santa  Ynez 

Aldebaran ;    Class    Crew    (4). 

Leland  Byron  Raab,  Civil  Engineering,  Stockton 

Dwight. 

Colin  Campbell  Rae.  Mining,  Holyoke,  Mass. 

Mim  Kaph  Mini;  Mining  Association,  Treasurer  (3);'  Officers'  Club;  First 
Lieut.   Co.  F;   Chairman   Mining  Banquet  Committee   (4). 


Los  Angeles 

Berkeley 

Freshman    Football    Team ; 

(2),  (3),  (4)  ;  Junior  Prom 


John   Walker  Rankin,  Natural   Sciences, 

A  A*;   English  Club;    Mask  and  Dagger. 
Albert  John   Rathbone,  Agriculture, 

<pA0;  AZ;  "Big  C"  Society;  Agricultural    Club; 

Freshman   Track   Team;   Varsity   Track  Team  (1), 

Committee ;    Pacific   Coast   Interscholastic  Committee. 
Jay  Marion  Read,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Calimedico  ;  N  2  N ;  B.  K.  A. ;  Harvey    Club ;    Freshman    Track    Team  ;    Senior 

Swimming  Team. 

Lester  Seward  Ready,  Mechanics,  Ventura 

Golden  Bear;  "Big  C"  Society;  Varsity  Track  Team  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4). 


THE    SPRING    FESTIVAL   OF    1911 


100 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Anna  Rearden,  Letters,  Belvedere 

Author  of  1912  Partheneia. 

Robert  Reid,  Mechanics,  San   Francisco 

Stanley  Marx  Reinhaus,  Social  Sciences,  Santa    Ana 

Hazel  Catherine  Remsen,  Letters,  Los  Angeles 

Carnarvon. 

George  Kremer  Rhodes,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Diego 

Cast  of  Shoemaker's  Holiday,  Nero,  C?esar  and  Cleopatra,  Junior  Farce. 

Gertrude  Ann  Rice,  Social  Sciences,  Santa  Maria 

A  X  ft 

Thomas  Briggs  Rice,  Mining,  Douglas,    Ariz. 

2  X;  Skull  and  Keys;  U.  N.  X. ;  Associate  Manager  Blue  and  Gold  (3)  ;  Senior 
Ball  Committee. 

Milo  Rees  Robbins,  Social  Sciences,  Tacoma.   Wash. 

AX;  Senate;  Chairman  Membership  Committee,  Senate  (3);  League  of  the 
Republic;  First  Lieut.  Co.  A;  Captain  Provisional  Co.;  Permanent  Organization 
Committee    (4)  ;   Special   Committee  Blue  and  Gold  Fund. 

Violet    Richardson,    Natural    Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Frank  Rieber,  Mechanics,  Berkeley 

AA*. 

Kenneth  William  Robarts,  Civil  Engineering,  Ferndale 

#2  K. 

Ethel  Robinson,  Letters,  Oakland 

II  B  $ ;    Senior   Advisory   Committee. 

Guglielma   L.   Roeth,  Social  Sciences,  Piedmont 

AAA. 

Harry  Newton   Rogers,  Commerce,  Los  Angeles 

*  K  2  ;  "Big  C"  Societv;  Class  President  (4);  Varsity  Tennis  Team  (1);  Cap- 
tain  (3). 

Frank  Albert  Roller,  Civil  Engineering,  Oakland 

K  A ;  Treasurer  U.  C.  C.  E.  (4)  ;  Civil  Engineers'  Banquet  Committee  Chairman 
(3),  (4). 

Bernard  John   Rosenthal,  Mining,  San  Francisco 

Margaret  Barbara  Ross,  Social  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Manager's  Staff  Women's  Day  Pelican   (4)  ;  Senior  Advisory  Committee. 

Cecilia  Blumensohn  Roth,  Social  Sciences,  San   Francisco 

Lulu  Dorathea  Rubke,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

ASA;  A.  W.  S.  Spring  Festival  (2);  Senior  Advisory  Committee;  Senior  Ball 
Committee;  A.  W.  S.  Open  House  Committee  (3). 

Jkssie   Helen  Runyon,  Letters,  Berkeley 

KAO;  Y.  W.  C.  A.;  Secretary  Sports  and  Pastimes  (3);  Art  Staff  Blue  and 
Gold;  Sophomore  Hop  Committee;  (3);  Rooms  Committee  A.  W.  S.  (3); 
Senior  Advisory  Committee ;  Senior  Ball  Committee. 

Archibald  William  Rushforth,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Y.  M.  C.  A.  Cabinet  (2),  (3),  (4)  ;  Manager  Architectural  Association  Year 
Book  (4). 

Mark  Ernest  Said,  Natural  Sciences,  Bakersfield 

Raymond  Salisbury,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Otto  Edward  Sandman,  Mechanics,  Stockton 

A.  E.  and  M.  E. ;  Chairman  U.  C.  Branch  of  A.  S.  M.  E. ;  First  Lieutenant 
Company  M;  Baseball  Squad;  Captain  Class  Baseball  Team  (4);  Senior  Men's 
Banquet   Committee    (4)  ;    Labor    Day  Committee  (4). 

101 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Horace  Earl  Sandoval,  Mechanics,  Sonora 

TBII;  A.  E.  and  M.  E. ;  A.  I.  E.  E. ;  Polydeucean  Club,  President  (4). 

Joseph  T.   Saunders,  Agriculture,  Ukiah 

U.  C.  Forestry  Club,  President  (4). 

Fred  Nicholas  Scatena,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Elsa  Marguerite  Schilling,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

K  A  0 ;  Sophomore  Hop  Committee  ;  Junior  Prom  Committee ;  Senior  Advisory 
Committee ;    Senior    Ball    Committee. 

Caroline  Schleef,  Letters,  Berkeley 

Shirley  Schnoor,  Social   Sciences,  Fortuna 

Enewah ;    Chemistry  Fiends. 

Agnes  Julia  Scholl,  Letters,  Los  Angeles 

Newman  Club,  Vice-President  (4)  ;  Chairman  Social  Committee  (3)  ;  Chem- 
istry Fiends;  Harvey  Club;  1912  Blue  and  Gold  Managerial  Staff  (3)  ;  A.  W.  S. 
Reception  Committee  (2)  ;  Junior  Prom  Committee ;  Senior  Advisory  Commit- 
tee;   General   Committee   Senior   Week;    Girton    Hall   Finance   Committee    (3). 

Edgar  Schwabacher.  Natural  Science,  San   Francisco 

Commerce  Club. 

Charles  Albert  Schweissinger,  Civil  Engineering,  Los  Angeles 

Helen  Maxine  Schweitzer,  Social  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Treble  Clef;   Pilgrimage  Committee  Senior  Week. 

Elma  Adella  Scott,  Social  Sciences,  Downey 

AXfi 

Raymond  Marchant  Scott,  Agriculture,  lone 

Hilgard  Club;   Freshman  Track  Team   (1);  Varsity  Track  Team    (2);   Pacific 

Coast  Conference  Team   (2)  ;  Western  Conference  Team  (2)  ;  Senior  Assembly 

Committee. 
Walter  John  Seaborn,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Niles  Pond  Searls,  Agriculture,  Nevada   City 

A  Z  ;   Senior  Ball  Committee. 
Agnes  Isabelle  Sharp,  Natural  Sciences,  Fort  Jones 

Hollace  Joy  Shaw,  Social  Sciences,  Los  Angeles 

Rediviva;    Class   Vice-President    (2)  ;  Assistant  Class  Treasurer  (2)  ;  Blue  and 

Gold     Staff;     Junior     Farce    Committee;    A.    W.    S.    Finance    Committee    (2); 

Women's    Day    Committee    (2),    (3)  ;    Women's    Senior    Hall    Building    Fund 

Committee  (3)  ;  Senior  Ball  Committee. 
Robert  Stanton  Sherman,  Natural  Sciences,  Newcastle 

Skulls;  #X. 
James  Hecht  Shields,  Social  Sciences,  Twin  Falls,  Idaho 

Ruth  Wetmore  Shinn,  North    Fork 

Fred  Milton  Shipper,  Social  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

English  Club;  Congress  Debating  Society,    Clerk    (2),    Speaker    Pro   Tern    (3), 

Speaker   (4);  John  Marshall  Law  Club;    Member    of    Debating    Council    (3); 

Chairman    (4);   Freshman  and   Sophomore  Debating  Teams;  Carnot  Team  (2), 

(3)  ;  Medalist  (3)  ;  Intercollegiate  Debating  Team  (2),  (3)  ;  Congress  Debating 
Team  (3). 

Roy  Lothrop  Shurtleff,  Commerce,  Berkeley. 

Winged  Helmet ;  Golden  Bear ;  Economics  Club ;  U  N  X ;  Mandolin  Club ;  Com- 
merce   Club;    Second    Vice-President    (4);    Daily    Calif ornian,    Manager    (3), 

(4)  ;  Sophomore  Hop  Committee  (2)  ;  Junior  Informal  Committee  (3)  ;  Senior 
Assembly  Committee  (4)  ;  General  Committee  Senior  Week. 

Caro  Halstead  Simonson,  Natural  Sciences,  Alameda 

AT;  Class  Secretary  (3);  Junior  Prom  Committee;  Junior  Informal  Commit- 
tee ;  Senior  Advisory  Committee. 

102 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


SENIOR   PILGRIMAGE 


Alameda 
Pacheco 


Albion,  Idaho 

Santa  Paula 
San  Diego 

Philadelphia,  Pa. 
Mitchell,  S.  Dak. 
Berkeley 


George  Metcalfe   Simonson,   Mechanics, 
Earl  Alfred  Slater,  Mechanical  Engineering, 

Dwight. 
Clarence  Nevel  Smith,  Social  Sciences, 

Dahlonega ;  Glee  Club ;  The  Mikado. 

Laura  Smith,  Natural  Sciences, 

Laurence  Hammond  Smith,  Natural  Sciences, 
<pBK 

Charles  Albert  Smith,  Natural  Sciences, 

Una  Denning  Smith,  Social  Sciences, 

William  Harris  Smyth,  Civil  Engineering, 

A  A3>;  TBLT;  Civil  Engineering  Association,  Vice-President  (3),  President  (4)  ; 

California  Journal  of  Technology,  Associate  Editor  (2)  ;  Senior  Ball  Committee. 

Harry  James  Snook,  Natural  Sciences,  Greeley,  Colo. 

Charles  Carroll  Snyder,  Mechanics,  Los  Angeles 

^T 

Ida  Mansfield  Spasoff,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Stanley  Adrian  Spellmeyer,  Mining,  Los  Angeles 

Dwight. 
Doris  Churchill  Spencer,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Prytanean;  Architectural  Association,  Secretary  (4)  ;  Women's  Orchestra;  Treas- 
urer of  Sports  and  Pastimes  (3)  ;  Captain  Varsity  Basketball  Team  (4)  ;  Cap- 
tain Class  Basketball  Team  (2),  (3),  (4);  Varsity  Basketball  Team  (1),  (2), 
(3),  (4)  ;  Intercollegiate  Fencing  (3)  ;  Women's  Day  Pelican  Staff  (4)  ;  Fur- 
nishing Committee  for  Senior  Women's  Hall  (4). 
Anna  Kalfus  Spero,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Mabel  Spicker,  Natural  Sciences,  Los  Angeles 

Chester  Joseph  Staley,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Circulo  Hispanico;   Cercle  Francaise ;  La  Parlotte ;  Y.  M.  C.  A. ;  President  Social 
Progress   Club   (2). 
Elaine  Maud  Standish,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

A  0  n  ;   Mandolin  Club,  Vice-President  (4)  ;  Sophomore  Hop  Committee  ;  Junior 
Prom  Committee;  Senior  Assembly  C    ommittee. 

103 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


Wolcott  Pratt  Stanton,  Alining,  San  Francisco 

AKE;  0T;  Glee  Club  (2),  (3),  (4);  Mining  Association  (3),  (4) 
Informal  Committee;   Decoration  Committee  Senior  Ball. 


Sophomore 


Berkeley 
Tern    (4)  ;    Senior   Banquet 

San  Luis  Obispo 


Mill 


Valley 

Senate  (2),  (3)  ;  Uni- 


Assembly  Com- 


Esther  Starkweather,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Effa  Mae  Steele,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Erna  Steindorff,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Secretary  Konversations  Klub   (2)  ;  President  Konversations  Klub  (3)  ;  Treble 

Clef. 

Stanley  Roman  Sterne,  Letters, 

Bench  and  Bar  Law  Club;  Congress,   Speaker   Pro 
Committee. 

Jeanette  Stewart,  Social  Sciences, 
Cranford;  Y.  W.  C.  A. 

Harry  Ellis  Stocker,  Social  Sciences, 

Calimedico ;  League  of  the  Republic,  Secretary  (3),  (4) 
versity  of  California  Club   (4). 

Elsie  Marion  Stoddard,  Social  Sciences,  Merced 

AXQ;  Senior  Advisory  Committee ;  A.  W.  S.  Open  House  Committee  (2)  ; 
Plaudertasche. 

Reginald  Carlyle  Stoner,  Natural  Sciences,  Bakersfield 

ATO;  "Big  C"  Society;  Varsity  Baseball    (1),    (2),    (3),    (4); 
mittee. 

Tracy  Irwin  Storer,  Natural  Science  (Zoology),  Oakland 

Harvey  Club;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff  (3);  First  Lieut.  Co.  B. 

Vera  La  Rue  Sturges,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Diego 

John  Robert  Suman,  Mining,  Hollywood 

AT;    TB.n;   9T;   Mining  Association. 

Joe  Goodrich  Sweet,  Natural  Sciences,  Fresno 

La  Junta;  <pA«I>;  Golden  Bear;  Sword  and  Scales;  Senate  (1),  (2),  (3),  Presi- 
dent (4)  ;  Senate  Debating  Team  (3)  ;  Carnot  (3)  ;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff  (3)  ; 
Junior  Prom  Committee ;  Junior  Men's  Banquet  Committee ;  Undergraduate  Stu- 
dents' Affairs  Committee ;  Senior  Record  Committee ;  General  Committee  Senior 
Week. 

Loren  Bennett  Taber,  Civil  Engineering,  San  Francisco 

Ralph  Tavenner,  Chemistry,  Independence,  Ore. 

Mini  Kaph  Mini. 

Arthur  Winfield  Taylor,  Social  Sciences,  Santa  Paula 

La  Junta ;  <l>  A  <i> ;  "Big  C"  Society ;  Congress  Debating  Society ;  Class  Treasurer 
(4);  Freshman  Track  Team;  Varsity  Track  Team  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Chair- 
man Senior  Assembly  Committee. 

Ellis  Wing  Taylor,  Mechanics,  Los  Angeles 

*K2;  A.  E.  and  M.  E. ;  Mandolin  Club. 

Caroline  Teichert,  Natural  Science,  Sacramento 

KKF;  Prytanean;  President  of  Treble  Clef  (4);  Y.  W.  C.  A.  Cabinet  (4); 
Senior  Record,  Junior  Farce,  Senior  Advisory  and  Spring  Festival  Committees ; 
Extravaganza    Committee    Senior    Week. 

Lillian  Gladys  Thaxter,  Letters,  Berkeley 

Robert  Rugge  Thomas,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

2X 

Charles  Henry  Thompson,  Jr.,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Congress;  League  of  the  Republic;  La  Parlotte  (2)  ;  Bench  and  Bar  (4)  ;  Junior 
Farce  Cast;  First  Lieut.,  Co.  N. 

104 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


LABOR    DAY 

James  Harrison  Thomson,  Civil  Engineering,  Seattle,  Wash. 

B  ©  n  ;  Varsity  Rifle  Team  (3)  ;  Treasurer  Civil  Engineering  Association  (4)  ; 
Captain  and  Regimental  Adjutant  (3). 

Percy  William  Thompson,  Mining,  Pasadena 

Frederick  G.  Tickell,  Mining,  Sacramento 

ATA;   9  T. 

Ingvart  Holm  Tielman,  Civil  Engineering,  Fresno 

Helen  Vaux  Tillotson,  Social  Sciences,  Santa  Cruz 

Co-author  of  Pelican  Prize  Story  (3)  ;  Women's  Day  Pelican  Staff  (4)  ;  Senior 
Advisory   Committee;   Women's   Masquerade  Committee  (3). 

Emily  Hilton  Timerman,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

Archibald  Bruce  Tinning,  Natural  Sciences,  Martinez 

Ben 

Charlotte  Genevieve  Touhey.  Social  Sciences, 

ASA;  Newman  Club. 
Katherine  Tresler,  Social  Sciences, 
Harriet  Williamson  Tuft,  Social  Sciences, 

Aldebaran ;  Y.  W.  C.  A. ;  Class  Basketball  Team 

Y.  W.  C.  A.  Social  Committee. 

Warren  Porter  Tufts,  Commerce,  Portland,  Ore. 

Economics  Club,  Vice-President  (4)  ;  President  Cadet  Officers'  Club  (4)  ;  Presi- 
dent Portland  Club  (4)  ;  Commerce  Club  (3),  (4)  ;  Der  Sprechverband  (1), 
(2);  Freshman  Track  Team;  Captain  and  Adjutant  (4);  General  Chairman 
Military  Ball  (4). 

Alice  Kate  Tupman,  Letters,  Los  Angeles 

Carnarvon. 


San  Francisco 

San  Francisco 

Fresno 
A.  W.  S.  Finance  Committee ; 


Pearl  Jeannette  Tuttle,  Natural  Sciences, 
AXS! 


Los  Angeles 


Elbert  Merritt  Vail,  Commerce,  Oakland 

B  0  n ;  "Big  C"  Society ;  Freshman  Track  Team ;  Varsity  Track  Team. 

Cyrus  Eugene  Van  Deventer,  Social  Sciences,  Redlands 

Dahlonega ;  N  2  N. 


105 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

Lilian  Van  Dyke,  Social  Sciences,  Los  Angeles 

K  A  6 ;  Senior  Assembly  Committee ;  Senior  Women's  Hall  Furnishing  Com- 
mittee. 

May  Van  Maren,  Natural  Sciences,  Fair  Oaks 

KKF;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff;  Senior  Advisory  Committee;  Senior  Ball  Com- 
mittee ;  A.  W.  S.  Finance  Committee. 

Francis  Edward  Vaughan,  Mining,  Los  Angeles 

Mining  Association. 

Walter  Samuel  Rip  Van  Winkle,  Mechanics,  Long  Beach 

A.  E.  and  M.  E.,  Secretary  (3)  ;  Y.  M.  C.  A.;  First  Lieut.  (Staff  Officer)  (3), 
(4). 

Thomas  William  Veitch,  Agriculture,  Oakland 

ATA;  Skull  and  Keys;  English  Club;  Blue  and  Gold,  Occident  and  Pelican 
Staffs;  Extravaganza  Committee  Senior  Week. 

Reid  McDowell  Venable,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Prytanean ;  Y.  W.  C.  A.  Cabinet  (4)  ;  Women's  Undergraduate  Student  Affairs 
Committee  (4)  ;  Senior  Advisory  Board  (4)  ;  Chairman  Book  Exchange  Com- 
mittee (2)  ;  General  Chairman  Women's  Masquerade  (4)  ;  Permanent  Organiza- 
tion  Committee    (4). 

Benjamin  Harrison  Viau,  Natural  Sciences,  Sanger 

Dahlonega. 

Jorge  Andres  Villegas,  Mechanics,  Santiago,  Chile 

Circulo  Hispanico;  Newman  Club;  Los  Secuestradores  (4);  El  Rev  Que  Rabio 
(4). 

Royal  Arnold  Vitousek,  Commerce,  Healdsburg 

Pirate;  "Big  C"  Society;  Congress  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4);  Cathay  Club;  Der 
Deutsche  Kranzen ;  Class  President  (2);  Track  Team  (2),  (3),  (4);  Varsity 
Relay  Team  (3)  ;  Senior  Ball  Committee. 

Ralph   Chetlaine   Waddell,  Letters,  Oakland 

Thomas  Brainard  Waddell,  Civil  Engineering,  Oakland 

tbii 

Catherine  Lois  Walker,  Letters,  San  Francisco 

Xfi;  Prytanean;  English  Club,  Secretary  (3)  ;  Blue  and  Gold;  Occident,  Liter- 
ary Editor  Women's  Day  Edition  (4)  ;  Standing  Social  Committe  A.  W.  S.  (4)  ; 
Extravaganza    Committee    Senior    Week. 

James  Edwin  Wallace,  Social  Sciences,  Hollywood 

Pirate;  Freshman  Track  Team;  Varsity  Track  Team  (2),  (3),  (4). 

Jessie  Douglass  Wallace,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Charles  Leroy  Walton,  Natural  Sciences,  Sanger 

Los  Amigos;  Mim  Kaph  Mim;  Levi  Strauss  Scholarship  (3),  (4). 

Earl  Warren  ;  Social  Sciences,  Bakersfield 

La  Junta ;  U.  N.  X. ;  Chairman  Reception  Committee  Sophomore  Hop ;  Senior 
Banquet  Committee. 

Ina  Polson  Warwick,  Letters,  Berkeley 

La  Parlotte  (2)  ;  Der  Deutsche  Zinkel  (3)  ;  Editorial  Staff  Women's  Day  Occi- 
dent; Editorial  Staff  Women's  Day  Calif ornian ;  Senior  Advisory  Committee ; 
Spring  Festival  Committee ;  Chairman  Senior  Women's  Register  Committee ;  Pil- 
grimage Committee  Senior  Week. 

Edward  Louis  Watts,  Mechanics,  Berkeley 

X#;  0NE;  Winged  Helmet;  Skull  and  Keys;  Golden  Bear;  "Big  C"  Society; 
A.  E.  and  M.  E. ;  Freshman  Football  Team;  Varsity  Football  Team  (1),  (2), 
(3),  (4)  ;  Freshman  Track  Team;  Coach  Freshman  Football  Team  (4)  ;  Chair- 
man Students'  Welfare  Committee;  Chairman  P.  C.  I.  Circus;  Reception  Com- 
mittee Senior  Ball. 

106 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 

De  Witt  Clinton  Weeks,  Natural  Sciences,  Alhambra 

Grace  Yale  Weeks,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

A  0  II ;  Prytanean;  Architectural  Association,  Secretary  (2),  Vice-President  (3)  ; 
Class  Secretary  (4)  ;  Blue  and  Gold,  Women's  Day  Pelican  (2),  (3),  (4),  and 
Occident  (3),  (4)  Staffs;  Senior  Advisory  Committee;  A.  W.  S.  Boarding 
House   Committee;    Senior   Extravaganza  Committee. 

Caroline  V.  Welts,  Social  Sciences,  Bakersfield 

Senior  Ball  Committee  Senior  Week. 
Alice  Babette  Weber,  Natural  Sciences,  Berkeley 

Manager  of  Fencing  (3),  (4)  ;  Rowing  (1),  (2),  (3),  (4). 
Julian  Henry  Weissbein,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Polydeucean  Club  (2)  ;  Debating  Society    (1)  ;   Assistant  Manager  "Caesar  and 

Cleopatra";    "Big   C"    Committee    (1);  News  Editor  Daily  Calif 'ornian   (3). 

Eugene  Welch,  Social  Sciences,  San  Jose 

Albert  Fabian  Welin,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Agnes  Ballard  Welsh,  Social  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

K  A  9 ;   Senior  Advisory  Committee ;   Sophomore  Hop  Committee. 

Herbert  Armand  Werle,  Civil  Engineering,  San   Francisco 

Albert  Marine  Weston,  Natural  Sciences,  Monrovia 

Del  Rey;  Mim  Kaph  Mim. 

Helen  Gould  Weston,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

kkt 

Lydia  Wethern,  Social  Sciences,  Oakland 

Class  Women's  Crew   (4). 

George  Jenner  Wheat,  Mechanics,  Los  Angeles 

6  S ;  A.  E.  and  M.  E. ;  U.  C.  Branch  A.  I.  E.  E. 

Charles  Stetson  Wheeler,  Jr.,  Letters,  San  Francisco 

B0n;  "Big  C"  Society ;  Winged  Helmet ;  U.  N.  X ;  Class  President  (4)  ;  Under- 
graduate Student  Affairs  Committee  (4)  ;  Freshman  Football  Team;  Varsity 
Football  Team  (3);  Senate;  Blue  and  Gold  Staff;  Chairman  Junior  Banquet; 
Chairman  Senior  Record  Committee. ;    Dormitory    Committee. 

Hortense  Genotelle  White,  Social  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

Mabel  Jeannetta  White,  Natural  Science,  Berkeley 

Senior  Advisory  Committee ;  Book  Exchange ;  Committee  on  Permanent  Organ- 
ization ;  Charter  Day  Committee. 

Roy  Willbanks  White,  Civil  Engineering,  Lakeport 

Clayton  James  Wight,  Agriculture,  San  Diego 

Agricultural  Club. 

Samuel  Gerrit  Wight,  Agriculture,  Honolulu,  H.  T. 

A  K  E  ;  0  N  E. 

Veva  Corinthia  Wight,  Social  Sciences,  Riverside 

Stuart  Gardiner  Wilder,  Social  Sciences,  Berkeley 

X>3>;  Bench  and  Bar  Law  Club;  Treasurer  of  Class  (4)  ;  Class  Crew  (3)  ;  Class 
Swimming  Team,  Captain  (4)  ;  Varsity  Swimming  Team  (4)  ;  Freshman  Foot- 
ball Squad ;  Chairman  Arrangements  Committee  Junior  Prom ;  Chairman  Senior 
Assemblies  Committee ;  Chairman  Inter-Class  Swimming  Committee  (4)  ;  Senior 
Week  Finance  Committee. 

Marshall  Gould  Williamson,  Natural  Sciences,  San  Francisco 

K  2  ;  B  K  A. 

Gilbert  Willoughby,  Agriculture,  Beverly  Hills 

ATA;  Glee  Club  (2),  (3),  (4);  De  Koven  Club  (2),  (3)'r  ^4), 

Frank  Lake  Wilson,  Mining,  Spokane,  Wash. 

©  T;  Mining  Association,  Librarian  (3),  President  (4)  ;  Capt.  Co.  K  (4). 

107 


1912  SENIOR  RECORD 


Los  Angeles 
Berkeley 
Pasadena 
Bench   and   Bar   Law    Club ; 


Berkeley 


James  Wentrup  Wilson,  Civil  Engineering. 
Ralph  Elmer  Wilson,  Social  Sciences, 
George  Dillard  Wimp,  Social  Sciences, 

Congress,  League  of  the  Republic.   President    (4)  ; 

Y.  M.  C.  A.;  Senior  Ball  Committee. 
Rodert  Percy  Wisecaryer,  Social  Sciences, 

Treasurer  La  Parlotte  Club  (2);  League  of  the  Republic    (2).    (3) 

President  (1);   Senate;  Dormitory  Committee   (4);  Chairman  A.  S 

mittee  on  Undergraduate   Work    (4)  ;  First  Lieut.,  U.  C.  Cadets. 
Carmelita  Woerner,  Social  Sciences.  San  Francisco 

r #  B;   Junior   Farce ;    Senior   Ball    Committee ;  Junior  Prom  Committee 

more  Hop  Committee. 
William  David  Woi.fi:,  Mechanics, 

A.  E.  and  M.  E. ;  Y.  M.  C.  A.;  Freshman    Track 

(2),   (3). 
Henry  Norisert  Wolff,  Agriculture, 

B9n;  AZ;   Senate;  Agricultural  Clul 
Catherine  Woodhead,  Social  Sciences, 
J.  Homer  Woolsey.  Natural  Sciences, 

A  A  $  ;    N  2  N ;   Freshman   Track  Team. 
Harrison  Leroy  Wyrick,  Mining, 

Atherton ;  Mining  Association;  Capt.  Co.  L   (4). 
Edna  Louise  Yates,  Social  Sciences, 
Harry  Stanley  Yates,  Natural  Sciences, 

Skulls;   AZ. 


(4); 

U.  C. 


Class 
Com- 


^  Vallejo 
"earn;    Varsity 


Sopho- 


frack    Team 


San  Francisco 
Prize  Song  Bleecher  Contest. 
Berkeley 
Oakland 

Marysville 


Oakland 
Pomona 


John  Phillip  Zipf,  Mechanics, 
T  B  II 

William  Edward  Zuill,  Agriculture, 

Z*;   ONE;   Skull  and  Keys. 
Max  Young,  Mechanics, 
Edward   Hans  Zeitfuchs,  Chemistry, 


San  Francisco 
Los  Angeles 

Carpenteria 

Portland,  Ore. 


the  gateway 


108 


JUNIOR    CLASS 


JUNIOR  CLASS 


OFFICERS 


R.     G.     SPROUL 


MISS      RUTH      WARE 


First  Term 

PRESIDENT 
R.  G.  SPROUL 

VICE-PRESIDENT 
MISS  IRMA  FOVEAUX 

SECRETARY 
F.  D.  STEPHENS 

TREASURER 
C.  W.  SNOOK 

SERGEANT-AT-ARMS 
J.  A.  POTTER 

YELL  LEADER 
M.  W.  SAHLBERG 

AUDITING   COMMITTEE 

MISS  DOROTHY  PETERSON 

S.  L.  ARNOT 

L.  A.  SLOANE 


Second  Term 

PRESIDENT 
MISS  RUTH  WARE 

VICE-PRESIDENT 
L.  A.  SLOANE 

SECRETARY 
LYMAN  GRIMES 

TREASURER 
C.  L.  LE  BARON 

S  ERGE  ANT- AT- AR  M  S 
WM.  N.  KING 

YELL  LEADER 
E.  P.  COOK 

AUDITING   COMMITTEE 

MISS  EMILY  CHURCHILL 

H.  A.  STERN 


110 


Doris    Aden 
Arthur  Allyn 
Elizabeth   Anthony 
William   Ashley 
Elizabeth   Bailey 


Frances   Albee 
John    Altman 
Stanley   Arnott 
Helen    Ayer 
Donald   Baker 


Fred    Allen 
Victor   Anderson 
Mabel    Arnington 
Merle    Baden 
Clara   Baldwin 


Ray   Allin 
Mary  Andreason 
Walter  Aschenbrenner 
William   Bagby 
James   Ball 


111 


William   Ball 
Ethel    Beard 
Edward  Beeson 
Elsie  Biedenbach 
Flora    Black 


William    Barnhill 
Willard    Beatty 
Donald  Bennett 
Donald     Billick 
Tesse     Blain 


Annie    Bass 
John    BecK 
Kowena   Benson 
Daniel    Bisson 
Frederick   Blocli 


Lesley   Bates 
Archie    Beckett 
Roscoe    Berglund 
Emma   Black 
.Mary    Bogue 


112 


Albert  Bradley 
Mervyn  Brenner 
Elsiedora   Brinck 
A.    M.    Brown 


Frank   Booth 
Cora    Brandt 
Eveline    Bridgett 
Lucetta   Bromley 
Charles    Brown 


William   Booth 
David    Brant 
Edward    Brier 
Lloyd    Brooks 
Gertrude   Brown 


James    Boyd 
Vera  Branthaver 
William   Brier 
Rena  Brooks 
Sarita   Brown 


113 


Edna    Browning 
Leonard    Buck 
Milton   Campbell 
Sidney  Carlton 
Isis  Carter 

114 


Harold    Bruhns 
Glenn    Bundy 
Roy    Campbell 
Kenneth   Carpenter 
John    Carver 


Nan    Brunk 
Denair  Butler 
Bessie    Cantley 
Leland   Carrell 
Roland    Chamberlain 


Stanley   Bryan 
Lawrence   Byers 
Katherine  Carlton 
Ethel   Carroll 
William    Chamberlain 


Ella    Chaplin 
Emily  Churchhill 
John     Clark 
Elna    Clifford 
Harold   Cogswell 


William    Chessall 
Arthur  Clark 
Ervin  Clausen 
Raymond    Clifford 
Irving   Cohn 


May   Christal 
Frank    Clark 
Louise  Cleveland 
Ada   Cline 
Julian    Cohn 


James  Church 
Harry   Clark 
Neal    Cleveland 
Ralph    Coane 
Zella   Colburn 


115 


Gladys  Cole 
Gertrude   Comfort 
John   Connolly 
Leonard  Coombs 
Eric  Craig 

116 


Byron   Coleman 
Ralph    Comstock 
Thomas  Connolly 
Thomas  Copeland 
Thornton  Craig 


Victor    Collins 
Ashley    Conard 
Paul  Cook 
Arthur  Cortelyou 
Bessie    Cranston 


Eda   Colvin 
Alice  Connick 
Florence  Cook 
Mabel   Cowell 
Anita    Crellin 


Roy   Crites 
Eugene   Daney 
Constance    Davis 
Rollo   Davis 
F.    Derham 


William    Culp 
Jennie    Davidson 
Louis   Davis 
Susanna    Davis 
Ruth  Dewit 


J.  A.  Cunha 
Florence    Davies 
Mary    Davis 
Frank  Delano 
Mary    Dewitt 


Jean    Cunningham 
Brython  Davis 
Percy  Davis 
Donna    Deluce 
Arnold    Dickel 


117 


Laurence     Dickey 
Roy  Douglas 
Mary    Dunn 
Arthur    Eaton 
Randolph  Eisenhauer 


Howard   Dickson 
Rudolph  Dresel 
Thomas    Dunne 
Emily    Edgerley 
Gertrude    Elliot 


Grace    Dorey 
Daniel    Drumheller 
Edgar   Dutton 
Pearl    Edgerley 

Austin    Ellis 


Mary    Dotta 
William   Duncan 
Ermon  Eastman 
Joseph    Ehrman 
Grace   Ewing 


118 


■^MMHBHMI 


Rose   Farrell 
Naomi  Fieweger 
Clarence  Flanagan 
Jonathan    Foster 
Percy    Frater 


Harold    Farmer 
Harriet    Figg 
Godfrey   Fletcher 
Lewis    Foulke 
Herbert    French 


George  Faught 
John  Fisher 
John  Flodin 
Beryl   Fountaine 
Fay  Frisbie 


Frances  Ferrier 
Philip   Fisher 
Kim    Fong 
Irma  Foveaux 
Kendall  Frost 


119 


Blanchett    Fryer 
Jennie   Gardner 
William    Gay 
Margery  Glass 
Samuel  Goodall 


Victor    Gaines 
Endicott  Gardner 
Ruth    Genung 
Lois    Glidden 
Louis  Goodman 


Thornbrough  Gale 
Kebekah    Gardner 
J.   George 
Frederick    Gnarini 
Orville  Goss 


Marjory    Gardiner 
Francis    Gautier 
Matthis   Gerend 
Franklin    Gobar 
Armin    Graff 


120 


Harold   Gray 
Lyman    Grimes 
Ross  Guy 
Robert   Haggard 
Ruth  Halloran 


William   Greig 
Marjorie  Grinnell 
Minnie   Haack 
Henry    Haines 
Elizabeth  Hamilton 


John    Gribner 
Charles    Grunsky 
O.    A.    Haberdier 
Gabrielle    Hall 
Charles  Hampton 


Ronald    Griffin 
Robert   Gunn 
Sadie  Hageman 
Arthur   Hallberg 
Alfreda  Hanna 


121 


Evelyn   Hanna 
Mignon  Harmon 
James   Harvey 
John   Hassheider 
Hans  Hentschke 


Ray  Hanson 
Theresa  Harrington 
Margaretta    Harvey 
Royal   Havens 
Helen  Herdeg 


Herold  Hare 
Harry    Harris 
Marguerite  Hazeltine 
Harold  Hazen 
Charles  Herriott 


James    Hare 
Jacob  Hartman 
Arthur   Haslam 
Antonea   Henrich 
Gerald  Herrmann 


122 


Harlan   Heward 
Erie  Hill 
William    Hiney 
Edna  Hollingsworth 
R.    B.   Howell 


Inez   Hewitt 
Ray  Hill 

Margaret  Hodgen 
Alma  Honegger 
Isabel  Hoyt 


Charles  Heyer 
Richard  Hill 
Carl    Hohwiesner 
Warren  Horner 
Edgar   Hughes 


Hudson  Hibbard 
Mattie   Himes 
Charles   Holliger 
George   Howder 
W.  W.  Hughes 


123 


Osman    Hull 
Felix  Hurni 
Aaron  Isaacs 
Marion  James 
Helen  Johnson 


Charles   Humphreys 
Willis    Huson 
Louelle  Jackson 
Raymond    Jeans 
Mabel    Jones 


Ray  Ingles 
Jesse    Jacobus 
Renaldo  Jeffry 
Richard    Jones 


Mildred   Hunter 
Grace  Inwood 
William  Jaenicke 
Carl    Johnson 
Robert   Tones 


124 


Maurice  Joses 
Irma  Kendrick 
Martha  Kerns 
Frank  Kessler 
William   King 


Harriet  J 

John    Kennedy 
Daniel   Koshland 
William    Kew 
II.    B.    Kirkland 


vard    Kavanagh 
Margaret   Kenny 
Jay    Kerr 
Mary    Keyes 
Bertram    Kline 


Lucy    Keith 
Calvin    Kephart 
Kathleen   Kerr 
George    Keyston 
James   Knowles 


125 


Frederick  Koester 
Laura  Lamoureux 
Clyde    Le   Baron 
Jeanne  Leroux 
Frederick  Linde 


Edna  Kreyenhagen 
Egidio   Laraia 
David  Lee 
Lucile  Lewek 
Charlotte    Linden 


126 


Benjamin  Laflin 
Walter    Larson 
Shun    Lee 
Elizabeth   Lewis 
Donald  Lippincott 


Bertha   Lais 
Berthold    Latz 
Victor    Lenzen 
Otto   Liersch 
Marion  Lipman 


Margaret  Locan 
Denham  Lord 
Florence  Lucas 
Katherine  McCabe 
Alice  McComb 


Hope  Lockridge 
William   Lovett 
Wilbur   Luxton 
Madge  McCarthy 
James  McCormack 


Paul    Loewenthal 
Ivy  Lower 
Tames   MacDonald 
Harry  McClelland 
Florence  McCoy 


Clarence    Logan 
Irma  Lucas 
Anna   McAfee 
Mamie  McCollum 
Ralph  McCurdy 


127 


Jennie     McDonald 
Donald  MacLean 
Daniel    McPeak 
Hazel    Malcolm 
Florence   Marvin 


Melville    McDonough 
William    McMillan 
Margaret    McSweeney 
Edmund  Margrave 
Spencer  Mastick 


Stanley    McFadden 
Donald  MacMullen 
Phyllis    Maguire 
Ella     Martine 
Mabel    Mattern 


James   McKinley 
Joseph   McNamara 
Robert   Maile 
Albino    Martinetti 
Phoebe   Matthews 


128 


Veleda  Mattison 
Agnes    Mayo 
Herman    Mende 
Edwin    Merrill 
John    Miller 


Sante  Mattson 
Frank    Mayo 
Georgia  Meredith 
Eleanor   Merritt 
Martin    Mini 


Maude    Mayenbaum 
Edwin  Meddaugh 

Wynne   Meredith 

Earl   Miller 

Daisy    Monroe 


Ruth    Mayer 
Whitney  Mee 
Roy  Merrick 
William  Miller 
Graham  Moody 

129 


Thomas  Moody 
Myrl   Morris 
Francis   Moulton 
Jennie   Murray 
Gladys   Nielson 

130 


Florence  Moore 
Benjamin    Morrison 
Luray  Mouser 
C.  Musante 
Roy  Neily 


Vincenta    Moorshead 
Roy  Morse 
Melton   Mowbray 
Lloyd    Myers 
Charles    Nelson 


Laird   Morris 
ohn   Morton 
ary   Mulvaney 
Barbara    Nachtrieb 
Frank  Nelson 


fi 


Robert   Nelson 
Fred   Nielson 
Oscar   Norton 
Ferda   Ogle 
Allen  Owen 


Daisy   Newby 
Frank    Nilon 
Willard   Notting 
Koyd  Oliver 
Myron   Page 


Roy    Newton 
Haymond   Noble 
George   Oakes 
Jesse  O'Neill 
Albert  Paine 


Carl    Nichols 
Jack   Northup 
David    Oberg 
George    Oshinji 
Edwin    Parker 


131 


Meredith   Parker 
John   Peaslee 
Peter    Peterson 
Pauline    Pierson 
Kthel    Porter 


132 


Marguerite   Parr 
Gertrude    Percival 
Margaret   Pewtress 
Hope    Pinkley 
Harriet  Porter 


Joseph  Pavliger 
Anna  Peterson 
Katherine    Phileo 
Forrest  Plant 
Ruby   Poston 


Sterling  Peart 
Dorothy   Peterson 
Clark  Phillips 
James    Popkens 
Julius    Potter 


Jessie    Preble 
Thomas    Pring 
Eda  RamelH 
Chauncey  Reed 
John    Relifiscli 


Elwin    Purrington 
Ray  Randall 
Rhoda   Reed 
Gus  Reis 


Maude    Price 
Cyril   Quill 
Ralph   Raven 
Thomas  Reed 
Jacques    Resleure 


Milton   Prince 
Leo    Rabinowitz 
Henry    Ray 
Mary    Reese 
Alice  Reynolds 


133 


Ralph    Reynolds 
Harry  Richardson 
Rose    Rosenthal 
Cassius   Rowe 
Marian   Ryan 


Eric   Rhodes 
Eunice    Ricketts 
Jesse   Rosenwald 
John  Ruddock 
Florence   Ryle 


Floyd   Rice 
Hiram   Ricks 
James  Ross 
Ruth  Ruddock 
Manley  Sahlberg 


Rex    Rice 
Howard  Robinson 
W.    E.    Ross 
Richard   Rust 
Peter   Sala 


134 


Edward  Salomon 
Frederick   Schmutzler 
James  Shafer 
Clara    Sherwood 
Roy  Silent 


Lenore  Salsig 
Margaret  Schultz 
Jeannette   Shafer 
Robert  Shields 
Arthur  Silverman 


Hal   Sams 
Henry   Searls 
Elnora    Shannon 
Tames  Short 
F.   V.    Simonton 


Lillian  Sandholdt 
Marguerite  Seiffert 
Otis  Sharp 
Pearl   Sifford 
Earl   Sinclair 


135 


John   Simpson 
Benjamin   Small 
Ormond    Smith 
Frank  Stack 
Evelyn    Steel 


Gail    Sipes 
Walter    Smallwood 
Edgar    Snell 
Leslie  Stahl 
Irma   Stein 


Ralph    Sisson 
Charles  Smith 
Wade  Snook 
Walter  Stairs 
Dorsey   Stephens 


Lloyd   Sloane 
.Minnie   Smith 
Robert  Sproul 
Ruth   Stark 
William   Stephenson 


136 


Henry  Stern 
Howard  Stover 
Edgar  Sullivan 
Lloyd  Taliaferro 
Estelle  Tennis 


Lester    Stern 
Alice  Streets 
Edwin   Sullivan 
Thomas  Tavernetti 
Cecil   Thomas 


Thomas   Stewart 
Roland    Stringham 
Ada   Swortzel 
Ralph    Taylor 
Ira  Thomas 


George  Stone 
John  Stroud 
John   Tadich 
Russell  Taylor 
Harry  Todd 


137 


Frank  Tolf 
Edward  Trout 
Archie   Twogood 
Gladys  Van  Mater 
Edwin  Voorhies 

138 


Clare  Torrey 
Muriel   Trull 
Tames   Underhill 
Evans   Varner 
Murray   Vosburg 


Ida   Trask 
Arlo    Turner 
Addie   Vadney 
Kenneth  Volk 
Myer   Wahrhaftig 


John  Tripp 

Ovid   Tuttle 

Marie    Vaissade 

Elsa   Von  Wintzingerode 

Amy  Waite 


Carolyn  Waite 
Lawrence  Ward 
Enid    Watkins 
Lore   Weber 
Florence  Wheeler 


Lillian  Waite 
Mabel  Ware 
John   Watson 
Alice  Webster 
Rollo    Wheeler 


Clarence  Waldner 
Ruth    Ware 
Helen   Weber 
Hugh    Webster 
Will   Whelan 


Gerald  Wallace 
Maude  Wason 
Henry  Weber 
Hugh  Weldon 
Beulah   Whipple 


139 


Charles  White 
Francis    Wilson 
Clerimond  Withers 
Harry   Wood 
James  Wright 


Marshall    White 
Gladys    Wilson 
Freeman    Witt 
Horace  Woolley 
W.  C.  Wright 


Dorothy   Wilkinson 
Burt   Winslow 
Mark    Witt 
Dale    Worthington 
Fred    Wyatt 


S.  A.  White 
Georgia  Wiseman 
Walter   Wong 
Earnest    Wright 
Oliver   Wyllie 


140 


William    Yelland 


Oliver   Young 
Cleo   Zinn 


Gordon    Zander 

Martin    Zoller 


David    Zellerbach 


Photographs  in  1913  Blue  and  Gold 
are  by   ijushnell 


141 


SOPHOMORE  AND  FRESHMAN  CLASSES 


SOPHOMORE  CLASS 


OFFICERS 


First  Term 

PRESIDENT 
E.  R.  CRABBE 

VICE-PRESIDENT 
MISS    ETHEL   MURRAY 

SECRETARY 
C.   P.   MATHE 

TREASURER 
A.   I.   SMITH 

SERGEANT-AT-ARMS 
A.  W.  DRURY 

YELL  LEADER 
EVERETT   BARNARD 


Second  Term 

PRESIDENT 
THEODORE  GRADY 

VICE-PRESIDENT 
MISS  JESSIE  HARRIS 

SECRETARY 
M.  C.  NATHAN 

TREASURER 
L.  D.  WATKINS 

SERGEANT-AT-ARMS 
J.  J.  MEIGS 

YELL  LEADER 
A.  I.  SMITH 


FRESHMAN  CLASS 


OFFICERS 


First  Term 

PRESIDENT 
C.    R.    HILLS 

VICE-PRESIDENT 
MISS  C.  ANDERSON 

SECRETARY 
L.    R.   TAUSSIG 

TREASURER 
HAROLD   MILLER 

SERGEANT-AT-ARMS 
HARCOURT  BLADES 

YELL  LEADER 
W.  G.  WILSON 


Second  Term 

PRESIDENT 
C.    R.    HILLS 

VICE-PRESIDENT 
MISS  RUTH  JOHNSON 

SECRETARY 
A.  W.  CHRISTIE 

TREASURER 
P.   L.   CRANE 

SERGEANT-AT-ARMS 
A.   K.   SHERWIN 

YELL  LEADER 
W.   G.   WILSON 


144 


QTfje  College  gear 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 


Surveying  at  Camp  California 

HE  Summer  School  of  Sur- 
veying for  191 1,  like  all  pre- 
vious camps,  started  in  the 
third  month  of  May.      Be- 
ing duly  resigned  to  under- 
go the  trial  of  a  month's  hard   labor  as 
embryo     engineers,    we    were    pleasantly 
surprised  at  the  ideally  beautiful  situation 
of   Camp   California.       When   the   Ocean 
Shore  Limited  nosed  its  way  around  the 
last  bend  of  Scott's  Creek  and  dropped 
us  off  at  the  cook-house,  we  felt,  even  at 
the    beginning,    that    the     scenery    alone 
would    surely    compensate    for    whatever 
work  we  should  have  to  do. 

Promptly  on  our  arrival  "gow"  was 
served,  and  that  event,  too,  changed  con- 
siderably our  viewpoint  toward  the  galley 
slave  existence  that  we  had  been  led  to 
believe  would  be  our  portion  at  Summer 
Camp.  The  apparent  disorder  was  dissipated  immediately  after  dinner  by 
Professor  Sears  and  we  were  assigned  parties  and  tents,  and  problems  for 
the  next  day.  Already  we  were  slipping  into  the  routine  of  the  month  that 
was  to  follow  in  the  organized  Summer  Camp. 

Nearly  all  the  Juniors  and  most  of  the  Freshmen  had  a  perfectly  good 
opinion  of  Les  Ready,  but  on  that  first  morning  at  5:15  P.  X.,  when  he  blew 
his  little  bugle,  many  of  us  changed  it.  "Needs  must  when  the  devil  drives"' 
or  Les  blows,  otherwise  no  breakfast,  for  we  had  to  get  "dressed,"  washed  (?), 
and  to  the  dining  room  in  fifteen  minutes  if  we  wanted  any.  However, 
we  got  over  that  just  as  we  learned  to  forget  our  poison  oak  and  sunburn. 
We  did  not  work  all  the  time.  After  3  130  the  wind  was  so  strong  that 
accurate  work  was  impossible,  so  the  rest  of  the  day  until  5  130  was  spent  in 
playing  horse-shoes,  cards,  or  loafing  around  camp. 

The  many  walks  and  tramps  available  after  dinner,  on  Saturdays  and 
Sundays,  will  always  come  back  as  pleasant  remembrances  to  us.  The 
ramble  along  the  Swanton  Road  to  the  "P.  O.",  to  Mill  Creek,  to  Big  Creek 


BONING    UP 


146 


THE    COLLEGE    YEAR 


Dam,  and  to  Primrose 
Valley,  and  the  strolling 
back  together  in  the  dusk, 
all  combined  to  make  the 
four  weeks  a  real  vaca- 
tion. The  gathering 
around  the  camp-fire,  the 
singing  of  the  "Summer 
Camp  Quartette,"  the 
rides  on  the  logging  train, 
the  hiking  out  in  the  crisp 
morning  air  with  the  cries 
of  "Yea  Bo"  echoing 
across  the  canyon  and 
taken  up  again  from  dis- 
tant triangular  stations,  the  crabbing  as  to  who  should  pack  the  "gun" 
(transit),  all  these  things  served  to  make  up  the  context  of  our  life  at  camp. 
Finally  it  was  three  more  days,  two  more  days,  and  then  eventually  the 
last  night  came  and  we  got  together,  a  hundred  strong,  around  the  twenty- 
foot  bonfire.  Here  to  the  music  of  several  parodies  by  Gay  and  Kennedy, 
Ltd.  (it  should  have  been  unlimited),  we  closed  the  session  for  191 1.  We 
sang  the  last  parody — "Down  On  the  Farm"  : 

I've  been  working  down  at  Swanton,  all  the  live-long  day, 
I've  been  working  down  at  Swanton,  just  to  pass  that  course  3A ; 
Don't  you  hear  our  Prof.  Sears  calling,  earl-y  in  the  morn, 
Don't  you  hear  our  Prof.  Sears  calling,  "Eric !  blow  your  horn," 
and  then  "All  Hail"  floated  through  the  beautiful  moonlit  canyon  of  redwoods 
and  Summer  Camp  was  over. 


A    TRIO   OF    TRANSIT-MEN 


147 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 


European  Tour  of  Glee  Club 

ARLY  in  the  evening  of  May  17,  191 1,  car  number  1405,  Porter 

Dawson  aid  commanding,   was  boarded  by   some  thirty-seven 

members  of  the  Glee  and  Mandolin  Clubs,  thirteen  of  the  former 

bent  on  an  undertaking  which  to  the  skeptic  seemed  an  almost 

foolhardy  venture — nothing  less  than  a  tour  of  Europe. 

Much  might  be  written  of  the  trip  to  Chicago,  but  as  this  resume  must 

confine  itself  principally  to  a  recital  of  conquests  in  foreign  lands,  a  detailed 

description  of  the  Eastern  trip  is  impossible. 

After  a  stay  of  about  five  days  in  Chicago,  the  "original  13"  went  on 
to  New  York,  via  Niagara  Falls.  A  week  was  spent  in  viewing  the  wonders 
of  the  Great  White  Way.  On  June  14th  the  thirteen  singers  lock-stepped 
up  the  gang-plank  of  the  Pretoria — Hamburg-American  Line — and  a  few 
minutes  later,  amidst  a  variety  of  noises  which  in  the  aggregate  might  be 
described  as  "bedlamese,"  the  steamer  slid  slowly  away  from  the  pier. 
One  mighty  oski  and  the  trip  was  on. 

The  voyage  "am  bord  dem  Postdampfer  Pretoria"  was  filled  with  all 
those  incidents  which  characterize  ship-board  life.  None  of  the  party  was 
subject  to  that  dread  disorder,  sea-sickness,  due,  no  doubt,  in  large  measure 
to  the  prompt  use  of  that  best  of  tonics,  "dunkel  bier" — German  for  Coca- 
Cola. 

The  last  night  on  board  was  celebrated  by  the  rendition  of  a  musical 
program,  which  included  several  numbers  by  the  Glee  Club. 

The  next  day  a  landing  was  made  at  Boulogne,  and  that  afternoon  the 


148 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

Club  took  the  train  for  "Gay 
Paree,"  the  "citee  beautiful" 
of  the  Frenchman,  and 
"some  burg"  to  the  equally 
expressive  American. 

Ten  days  were  spent  in 
Paris.  Baedekers  were 
overworked.  The  treasures 
of  the  Louvre  and  Luxem- 
burg were  subjected  to  the 
cool  gaze  of  the  critic,  while 
a  quartette  Bal    Tabaran,    Pre   Catalan, 

Moulin  Rouge,  Raton  Mort  and  Maxim's  gave  the  desired  real  Parisian  at- 
mosphere. 

The  Fourth  of  July  in  Paris  was  not  all  that  an  American  could  have 
desired,  the  only  chance  for  a  burst  of  patriotism  being  given  that  evening  at 
a  concert  at  the  American  Chamber  of  Commerce  Club,  where  the  Club  ren- 
dered the  Star  Spangled  Banner  amidst  the  cheers  of  the  Americans  present. 
The  night  of  July  5th  the  concert  was  given  at  "Salle  des  Agriculteurs." 
Its  success  was  even  greater  than  the  club  had  anticipated  and  hoped  for. 
When  the  medley  of  American  songs,  ending  with  "Dixie"  and  "Star  Spangled 
Banner,"  was  sung,  it  was  quite  evident  that  the  crowd  was  entirely  American. 
The  next  day  the  Club  left  for  London  town,  via  that  rough  district,  the 
English  channel.  "Six  bob  thrupence  hapenny"  took  the  place  of  dix  franc, 
trois  centimes,  causing  a  tremendous  struggle  with  mental  arithmetic.  Three 
loyal  Californians  proceeded  to  "show  the  boys  a  good  time."      The  Club 

went  as  their  guests  to  the 
Harvard  -  Yale  vs.  Cam- 
bridge-Oxford track  meet. 
An  oski  by  the  California 
section  stood  out  in  decided 
contrast  to  the  somewhat 
tame  British  shouts  of  en- 
couragement. The  London 
concert,  given  in  Aeolian 
Hall,  was  even  more  success- 
ful than  that  given  in  Paris. 

A   LAKE   IN   GERMANY 


149 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

The  day  after  the  concert  the  Club  left  for  Berlin,  via  Boulogne,  where 
it  met  the  steamer  Pennsylvania,  Auxhaven  and  Hamburg.  Berlin  is  all  that 
the  Germans  claim — a  truly  wonderful  city.  Three  concerts  were  given  there. 
A  dance  was  held  after  the  last  concert  by  the  American  Woman's  Club. 
At  last,  on  July  30.  the  Club  took  the  train  for  Hamburg  and  Auxhaven,  from 
which  latter  place  it  sailed  on  the  Graf  Waldersee. 


ON    THE    WAY 


The  voyage  home  was  without  incident.  Finally  the  old  U.  S.  A.  loomed 
up  over  the  starboard  rail,  and  everyone  felt  a  long-to-be-remembered  thrill 
akin  to  that  "it's  good  to  be  here"  feeling.  In  Philadelphia  the  "original  13" 
became  a  thing  of  the  past.  Some  went  directly  home,  others  via  Washing- 
ton, others  via  Atlantic  City  and  the  Boardwalk,  others  via  New  York.  Thus 
ended  the  first  American  Glee  Club  trip  abroad.  Those  who  took  it  will  never 
forget  it,  and  those  good  Californians  who  didn't  take  it  must  surely  find 
some  pleasure  in  contemplating  the  fact  that  California  led  the  way. 

150 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 


Vr 


t\ 


Mandolin  Club  Hawaiian  Trip 

IXTEEN  men  of  the  University  Mandolin  Club  left  San  Francisco 
December  16,  191 1,  on  the  Oceanic  steamer  "Sierra,"  for  the 
first  annual  tour  of  the  Hawaiian  Islands.  The  outward  voyage 
was  marked  by  smooth  and  balmy  weather,  and  the  passengers  were 
treated  to  college  yells  and  informal  concerts  on  deck  every  night. 
On  the  morning  of  the  sixth  clay  everyone  enjoyed  the  wonderful  spectacle  of 
sunrise  over  the  Island  of  Molokai,  and  an  hour  later  the  brilliant  queen  mountain 
of  Oahu  hove  in  sight,  and  the  ship  dropped  anchor  in  Honolulu  harbor. 

Four  concerts  were  given  in  Honolulu  and  vicinity,  and  under  the  most 
efficient  leadership  of  R.  J.  Hill,  Jr.,  '13,  the  men  were  given  a  reception  such  as 
never  had  been  accorded  any  performance  given  in  Honolulu. 

A  week  of  entertainment  followed  which  only  the  hospitability  of  the  extreme 
West  can  equal.  The  warm  tropical  climate  permits  surf  riding  and  bathing  at 
all  times  of  the  year,  and  each  day  the  men  spent  hours  in  the  warm,  rolling  surf 
or  riding  in  the  native  canoes. 

An  interesting  feature  of  the  trip  was  the  welcome  accorded  the  Club  by 
the  native  singers,  from  whom  Hawaiian  selections  were  obtained  and  featured 
bv  the  Club  at  successive  concerts. 


151 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 


THE  PILGRIMAGE  AT  NORTH   HALL 

Senior  Week 

After  the  jubilee  of  1910,  its  color  and  life,  its  hilarity  and  merriment,  and 
its  more  serious  aspect  of  commemoration  and  remembrance,  the  191 1  Senior 
Week  promised  little.  But,  when  the  time  came,  191 1  went  forth  from  the 
Campus  in  a  flare  of  glory,  whose  brilliance  was  surpassed  not  even  by  that 
occasioned  by  1910's  departure.  The  191 1  Pilgrimage,  the  191 1  Commence- 
ment, the  191 1  banquets,  the  191 1  Phi  Beta  Kappa  address,  are  events  to  be 
treasured  in  one's  memory.      191  i's  Senior  Week  was  truly  California!!. 


Senior  Pilgrimage 

ENIOR  Pilgrimage  assembled  under  Senior  Oaks  on  Class  Day, 

Monday,   May   15th.     After  a   short  talk  by   President   R.  H. 

Moulton,   four  hundred  graduates,  the  women   dressed  all   in 

white   and   the   men   wearing  white   ducks   and   Senior   plugs, 

moved  up  to  California  Hall,  headed  by  the  University  Band. 

George  Alfred  Haines,  President  of  the  Associated  Students,  spoke  of  the 

class  ideals,  outlining  the  progress  that  had  been  made.     Everett  Loran  Ball, 

standing  on  the  steps  of  Boalt  Hall  of  Law,  urged  the  graduates  to  maintain 

the  spirit  of  honor,  integrity  and  persistence. 

At  South  Hall,  Professor  Henry  Morse  Stephens,  as  he  had  welcomed 
them  for  the  faculty  four  years  before,  bid  the  Seniors  God-speed.  Andrew 
Judson  Sturtevent,  Jr.,  speaking  from  a  window  in  the  Agricultural  Building, 
traced  the  rapid  growth  of  the  College  of  Agriculture.  Miss  Edna  Higgins, 
at  Hearst  Hall,  explained  the  value  of  athletic  training  for  women ;  while, 
at  Senior  Hall,  George  Armstead  Work  spoke  of  student  self-government 
and  Senior  control.  George  McMonies  Hunt,  at  the  Chemistry  Building; 
George  Cambridge  Grubb,  at  the  Civil  Engineering  Building;  George  Miles 
Collins,  at  the  Mining  Building,  and  Lawrence  O.  Wilson,  at  the  Mechanics 


152 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

Building,  described  the  work  of  their  colleges  and  praised  the  efforts  of  their 
faculties. 

At  the  old  library,  Miss  Rose  Gardner  sketched  the  three  hundred  differ- 
ent libraries,  each  representing  an  important  branch  of  study. 

Ralph  B.  High,  speaking  from  North  Hall  steps,  told  of  the  value  of  old 
traditions  which  center  there.  This,  with  "All  Hail"  and  a  farewell  oski 
closed  the  most  impressive  ceremony  of  the  year. 

Phi  Beta  Kappa  Address 

OODROW  WILSON,  Governor  of  New  Jersey,  ex- 
president  of  Princeton  University,  delivered  the  191 1  Phi  Beta 
Kappa  address  in  the  Greek  Theatre.  His  speech  dealt  with 
the  political  and  economic  problems  which  America  faces  today, 
and  his  analysis  of  the  situation  was  exceptionally  sane,  just 
and  penetrating.     Mr.  Wilson  gave  an  impartial  review  of  the  evils  to  which 

modern  social  conditions  have 
given  rise,  the  causes  under- 
lying such  evils  and  the  reme- 
dies most  likely  to  give  re- 
lief. As  a  special  point  about 
which  his  general  remarks 
were  grouped,  Mr.  Wilson 
told  of  conditions,  past  and 
present,  in  New  Jersey ;  how 
the  laxity  of  that  State's  laws 
had  allowed  questionable 
methods  to  enter  into  corpor- 
ations' policies,  how  legisla- 
tion on  sound  principles  was 
attacking  these  malpractices. 
Throughout  his  discussion 
the  speaker  showed  that  his 
advent  into  politics  had  not 
dulled  his  scholarship ;  his  ap- 
preciation of  the  fundamental 
principles  of  economics  to  present  conditions  was  in  marked  contrast  to 
the  displays  of  pyrotechniques  by  which  so  many  modern  public  speakers 
seek  to  gain  applause.  With  more  men  of  Mr.  Wilson's  caliber  in  public 
affairs    we    might    have    fewer    hit-or-miss    solutions    of    national    problems. 


GOVERNOR   WILSON    SPEAKING 


153 


ON    THE    PILGRIMAGE 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

Commencement  Day 

S  the  University  grows  year  by  year  and  degrees  are  conferred 
upon  an  ever  increasing  number  of  students,  the  Commence- 
ment exercises  inevitably  lose  in  ceremonial  value.  The  be- 
stowal of  an  individual  title  upon  a  large  group  of  people 
necessarily  lacks  the  personal  element  which  in  the  small  college 
made  Commencement  a  sacred  day  and  the  degree  conferred  a  University's 
benediction. 

In  spite  of  this  obvious  disadvantage  of  numbers  the  Forty-eighth  Com- 
mencement of  the  University  was  a  solemn  occasion  to  many  in  the  large 
crowd  that  gathered  under  a  cloudy  sky  in  the  Greek  Theatre  where  five  hun- 
dred and  twenty-three  members  of  the  Class  of  191 1  received  their  degrees. 

In  a  University  where  student  self  government  has  become  a  fact  it  is 
peculiarly  fitting  that  the  commencement  speakers  should  be  members  of  the 
graduating  class. 

The  first  speaker  of  this  year  was  Robert  Harrison  Moulton,  President 
of  the  Class,  who  explained  the  Problem  of  the  Modern  University  and  the 
effort  which  the  University  of  California  is  making  for  the  solution  of  this 
problem  in  the  advisorial  system  for  freshmen  and  the  co-operation  of  fraterni- 
ties with  the  faculty  in  an  endeavor  to  uphold  standards  of  scholarship. 

Aaron  Leland  Sapiro,  of  the  Hastings  College  of  the  Law,  spoke  of  the 
Social  Sphere  of  the  Law  among  other  professions,  its  purpose  the  creation  of 
citizenship. 

Rose  Gardner,  President  of  the  Associated  Women  Students,  spoke  of 
the  Self  Government  of  College  Women,  which  is  an  ideal  realized  at  Cali- 
fornia. Miss  Gardner  pointed  out  that  the  responsibility  which  women  have 
taken  upon  themselves  in  the  work  of  the  Student  Affairs  Committee  makes 
for  good  citizenship  here  and  hereafter,  so  that  this  committee,  which  is  a 
result  of  some  of  the  evils  attendant  upon  co-education,  becomes  its  strongest 
argument  and  justification. 

Howard  Hamel  Kreuger  spoke  eloquently  on  the  essential  practicality 
of  real  poetry,  maintaining  that  it  is  necessary  for  the  fullest  appreciation 
of  life. 

In  his  address  to  the  candidates  for  degrees,  President  Wheeler  reminded 
them  that  the  life  beyond  the  Campus  gate  is  surprisingly  like  the  life  within 
and  yields  to  each  man  only  that  which  he  brings  to  it.  ''And  now  you  go  forth 
all  into  the  same  world,  but  it  will  be  as  many  worlds  as  you  are  many. 

155 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 


AT    THE    CHEMISTRY    BUILDING 


You  may  own  of  it  just  as  much  as  by  use  and  understanding  you  can  earn. 
Go  forth  into  your  world ;  go  forth  and  earn." 

With  this  brief  and  effective  speech  the  Commencement  Exercises  were 
brought  to  a  close,  and  not  even  the  rain,  which  had  fallen  intermittently  dur- 
ing the  hour,  caused  anyone  in  the  audience  to  leave  until  the  hymn  had  been 
sung  and  the  Class  of  191 1  had  gone  out  from  the  Campus  with  the  Univer- 
sity's blessing  upon  them. 


156 


Pushball  Contest 

OR  the  second  time  since  its  institution  as  a  substitute  for  the 
old  lower  class  rush,  the  annual  pushball  game  failed  to  demon- 
strate the  superiority  of  either  class  in  the  art  of  rough  and 
tumble.  Two  strenuous  halves,  marked  by  an  intensity  of 
feeling  and  roughness  of  play  that  made  the  referee's  whistle 
the  busiest  thing  on  the  field,  left  the  score  still  o-o.  Despite  the  ex- 
hausted condition  of  many  of  the  players,  a  tug  of  war  was  then  resorted  to 
as  a  means  of  determining  the  question  of  Freshman-Sophomore  supremacy. 
Here  the  Freshmen  won  a  decisive  victory,  weight  and  numbers  overcoming 
the  desperate  struggle  that  1914  put  up  to  save  itself  from  the  unwelcome 
distinction  of  being  the  first  Sophomore  class  to  meet  defeat  in  the  annual 
mock  rush.  Three  minutes  of  desperate  straining  on  opposite  ends  of  a 
three  hundred-foot  hawser  and  191 5  marched  off  California  Field,  exulting 
in  the  knowledge  that,  as  pioneers  in  the  game  of  humbling  the  Sophomore, 
their  place  in  history  was  assured. 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 


FOULKE   AND    STROUD 


Skull  and  Keys  Running 

ARADING  before  the  eyes  of  the  Campus  on  the  clay  of  the 
Freshman  Glee  last  October,  the  neophytes  of  Skull  and  Key,  as 
usual,  clad  in  track  pants  and  dress  coats,  went  through  the  public 
rites  of  initiation  with  as  good  grace  as  they  could  muster. 

The  "runners"  were  J.  J.  Parker,  '12;  H.  H.  Phleger,  '12;  C. 
M.  Price,  12;  T.  B.  Rice,  '12;  B.  A.  Swartz,  '12;  C.  K.  White,  '12;  G.  D.  Ken- 
nedy, '12;  H.  T.  Douglas,  '12;  A.  W.  Elliott,  '12;  H.  G.  Gabbert,  '12;  R.  W. 
Hawley,  '12  ;  S.  B.  Peart,  '12  ;  Ff.  A.  Stern,  '13  ;  J.  A.  Stroud,  '13  ;  F.  F.  Rose,  '13  ; 
M.  S.  Vosburg,  '13;  R.  C.  Wheeler,  '13;  O.  C.  Wyllie,  '13;  W.  L.  Bagby,  '13; 
D.  O.  Brant,  '13 ;  W.  W.  Gay,  '13 ;  L.  M.  Foulke,  '13 ;  C.  W.  Heyer,  '13,  and  W.  N. 
King,  '13. 


159 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

Labor  Day 

HEN  the  memorable  morning  of  February  29th  arrived,  eighteen 
hundred  loyal  Californians  gathered  on  the  Campus  at  8  o'clock 
to  show  their  devotion  to  Alma  Mater.  The  occasion  was 
not  a  rally,  nor  an  athletic  contest ;  it  called  for  no  outburst 
of  enthusiasm  such  as  the  post-rally  serpentine  usually  evokes. 
A  quieter  and  deeper  enthusiasm  was  present,  for  the  day  was  Labor 
Day.  We  got  together  and  did 
something — the  road  from  Arch 
Street  to  the  Agricultural  Building 
is  witness  of  the  fact. 

The  tradition  —  for 
come  one  of  our  sa- 
cred ones — had  its  gen- 
esis in  1896,  when 
Regent 
Reinstein  di- 
rected     the 

,  ,  flN.\m         ■*    iTJiM  labors     oi      a      willing 

student  Hl    ]  Ij-jP  EtUftJT^V  H@         i_ 

MJ^amWfmms^M      Vtf  I  body.   Since  then,  every 

leap  year,  on  m)  >■         Bff&E^fl 

■P6BS3C5i3i*iS*  the     day     oi     all     days 

most    appro-      ■  J-  J 

priate  for  a  quadren- 
nial celebration,  to  wit: 
February  29 — each  loy- 
al Californian  has  worked 
with  pick  and  shovel,  root- 
ing and  digging  and  praying 
for  California. 

The  fourth  celebration  of 
its  kind  started  with  a  blast 
of  some  shrillness  and  dura- 
tion from  the  power  house  whistle.  The  men  of  each  college  gathered  at  some 
appointed  place  and  upon  the  stroke  of  eight  the  motley  crew,  marked  off 
one  from  another  by  distinctive  garb  and  unique  banners,  among  which  the 
Social  Science  "boiled"  shirt  was  conspicuous,  started  with  no  small  display 
of  speed  for  the  field  of  action.  This  was  the  hitherto  trackless  waste  be- 
tween Arch  Street  and  the  center  of  things  on  the  Campus,  and  not  ten 
minutes  had  passed  before  it  was  peopled  by  those  of  the  genus  under- 
graduate— and  graduate — each  individual  soul  of  whom  was  wielding  pick 
or  shovel.     The  sun  peeping  through  the  clouds  now  and  again,  looked  down 

160 


THE    KINGS    RETINUE 
PULLING   A    SCRAPER 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

upon  a  scene  in  which  flannel  shirts,  flying  arms,  uplifted  picks,  quick-moving 
shovels  and  spades  and  hurtling  clods  were  no  less  conspicuous  than  the 
evident  and  frantic  willingness  of  the  average  workingman  to  do  as  much 
as  he  could,  with  a  majestic  disregard  for  scientific  management  and  the 
efficiency  of  a  labor  unit. 

Until  one  o'clock  did  the  work  last.  The  five  hours  were  enlivened  by 
each  college  in  its  own  way.  The  agriculturists,  between  tugs  at  scrapers 
and  puffs  at  rustic  corn  cobs,  waved  their  straw  hats  and  bandanas  in  an 
unmusical  but  effective  rendition  of  that  famous  yell  which  has  as  its  inception 
the  rural  phrase,  "Bossy  cow-cow."  The  miners,  in  jumpers  and  wearing 
caps  with  miniature  lamps,  entered  into  the  spirit  of  the  day  in  a  workmanlike 
manner,  giving  vent  now  and  again  to  a  few  ribald  shouts.  Social  Scientists, 
wearing  the  white  carnation  approved  by  Dame  Fashion — the  business  men  of 
commerce,  stirred  to  further  productive  labor,  whose  direct  results  led  to 
an  attempted  corner  on  the  food  supply  later  on,  worthy  of  the  shrewedest  of 
entrepreneurs — the  mechanics,  accompanied  by  "Pat,  the  Janitor"  and  their 
own  ebullitions  of  youthful  vigor — the  C.  E.  men,  of  doughty  prowess,  the 
Romans  and  Greeks.  Belgae  and  Aquitani,  from  the  College  of  Letters,  the 
men  of  Natural  Science,  the  Chemists,  even  the  graduate  students,  op- 
pressed as  they  usually  are  by  the  cares  of  life — all,  all  were  there,  digging 
and  working  with  merry  hearts  for  California. 

Lunch  was  served  on  California  Field  by  the  women.  That  none  of  it  was 
left  is  testimony  to  its  goodness,  and  sufficient  witness  of  the  appreciation 
of  the  men.  The  rapidity  and  efficiency  of  service  were  nothing  short  of 
marvelous. 

In  the  afternoon  blistered  hands  and  sore  backs  were  forgotten.  Play 
followed  work  and  it  was  entered  into  with  fully  as  much  vim,  if  not  so  much 
determination  as  the  labor  of  the  morning. 

There  could  not  have  been  a  more  appropriate  beginning  for  the  con- 
tests and  knightly  jousts  than  the  royal  procession  which  encircled  the  field 
before  the  games  commenced.  Headed  by  maidens  in  classic  draperies,  strew- 
ing flowers,  the  pageant,  in  which  the  contestants-to-be  were  conspicuous, 
clad  as  they  were  in  multi-colored  draperies  and  heathenish  costumes,  moved 
in  stately  fashion  before  the  eyes  of  those  in  the  bleachers.  Not  the  least  in 
the  parade  were  the  Kink  and  Queen — H.  A.  Stern,  '13,  and  G.D.  Kennedy,  '12. 

After  a  fanfare  of  trumpets,  Announcer  Sproul  read  the  edict  of  the 
day,  which  was  well  received. 

The  nine  teams  in  the  pie-eating  contest,  after  the  inevitable  had  happened 
and  fragments,  here  and  there,  of  the  original  confection,  had  found  their 

161 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

respective  ways  down  respective  throats,  were  finally  sifted  down  to  two. 
From  the  final  struggle  Lyman  Grimes,  '13,  for  the  College  of  Letters,  emerged 
victorious. 

Followed  the  cracker-eating  contest,  which  was  won  by  G.  C.  Crowe,  12, 
of  the  College  of  Mining. 
Then    came    the    pillow- 
fighting  contest,  in  which 


THE    HOSPITAL   CORPS 

the  contestants  sat  astride  a 
crossbar,  high  above  the  ground, 
and  attempted  to  unseat  one  an- 
other by  vigorous  whacks  with 
straw-stuffed  sacks.  Neai  Cleve- 
land, '13,  of  Mechanics,  was  the 
victor,  whereupon  the  "kink" 
crowned  him  with  a  pie.  After 
an  exciting  Japanese  fencing 
match  the  jousts  were  run. 


OBSTACLE   RACE 
MINERS   AT   WORK 

The  teams  entered  consisted  of  a  man  acting  as  a 
beast  of  burden,  who  carried  upon  his  shoulders  the  knight,  equipped  with 
a  long,  stout  staff,  padded  at  the  end,  the  object  being  to  unseat  with  the 
weapon  an  opponent  similarly  situated.  R.  C.  Knight,  '13,  and  M.  S.  Gerend, 
'13,  Mechanics,  carried  off  the  laurels. 

Then  there  was  an  obstacle  race  and  a  greased  pig  race.  Suffice  it  to  say 
that  neither  was  without  its  full  share  of  interest  and  excitement. 

So  ended  the  afternoon.  In  the  evening  a  smoker  was  held  in  Harmon 
Gymnasium,  featured  by  boxing  and  wrestling  matches,  the  singing  of 
quartettes  and  trios,  and  fancy  dancing. 


162 


THE  FIELD  OF  ACTION 

THE  LUNCHEON 

A    HARD-FOUGHT   JOUST 


A   SCRAPER   TEAM 

'palms  OF  victory" 

FANCY  DANCING 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 


COLLEGE   OF   COMMERCE 


Such  was  Labor  Day — full  of  work  and  play,  of  physical  fatigue  and 
never-ending  merriment — a  day  for  Californians.  It  will  never  be  forgotten, 
although  others  will  come  and  go ;  the  deeper  meaning  of  the  tradition  is 
treasured  in  the  mind  of  every  participant. 

For  the  unparalleled  success  of  the  day  and  the  efficient  arrangements 
made,  thanks  and  appreciation  are  due  H.  H.  Phleger,  '12,  in  charge  of  the 
morning's  work,  and  H.  G.  Gabbert,  '12,  who  supervised  the  afternoon  and 
evening  amusement. 


'Sports  and  Pastimes"  Masquerade 

NYONE  within  three  blocks  of  the  Campus  on  the  evening  of 
November  4th  must  have  marveled  somewhat  at  the  shrill 
chorus  of  shrieks  which  continued  without  intermission  like  a 
siren  whistle  for  three  hours  in  Harmon  Gym.  The  annual 
Sports  and  Pastimes  Masquerade  was  in  full  swing. 
For  one  night  several  hundred  University  women  forgot  their  dignity 
and  returned  to  the  days  of  Dutch  cuts  and  short  dresses.  The  gymnasium 
was  transformed  into  a  model  playground,  completely  equipped  with  sand- 
piles,  swings,  see-saws  and  slides.  A  short  program  to  amuse  the  children 
was  provided.  It  consisted  of  a  Swing  Song,  by  six  girls ;  a  dance,  by  eight 
Teddy  Bears;  a  short  skit,  "The  College  Woman,"  and  a  series  of  pantomimes 
from  "Alice  in  Wonderland."  During  the  latter  part  of  the  evening  the 
Women's  Orchestra  furnished  music  for  dancing,  and  the  Refreshment  Com- 
mittee in  the  guise  of  hokey-pokey  men  served  ice-cream  cornucopias. 


164 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

Women's  Last  Senior  Singing  at  Hearst  Hall 

fjFTER  Senior  Singing,  on  the  twenty-sixth  of  October,  the 
Senior  women  presented  an  entertainment  which  was  to  serve 
as  a  farewell  to  Hearst  Hall,  the  old  meeting  place  for  many- 
Senior  Singings,  as  their  own  long  talked-of  hall  was  ready 
to  be  used  for  future  meetings.  The  "piece  de  resistance"  of  the 
entertainment  was  a  military  drama,  "By  the  Enemy's  Hands,"  enacted  entire- 
ly by  Senior  women.  Refreshments  were  served  and  the  Senior  women  and 
their  guests  left  their  old  home  with  only  the  kindest  memories. 


SENIOR    WOMEN     SINGING    IN    THE    NEW    HALL 


Opening  of  Senior  Women's  Hall 

T  was  a  happy  event,  the  opening  of  Senior  Women's  Hall, 
and  the  women  of  1912  feel  themselves  undeservedly  fortunate 
that  the  wish  of  Senior  women  for  two  years  past  should  have 
been  realized  during  the  1912  Senior  year.  On  November 
twenty-third,  the  new  bungalow  in  Strawberry  Canyon,  just 
south  of  the  Greek  Theatre,  was  formally  opened.  In  the  afternoon  the 
Seniors  were  hostesses  at  a  tea   for  graduates  and  faculty   women,  and   in 


165 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

the  evening,  after  the  visitors  had  left,  the  girls(?)  gathered  around  the  fire  for 
a  basket  supper,  which  was  followed  by  Senior  singing  and  a  very  enjoyable 
musical  program.  The  white  dresses  shone  in  the  cheerful  glow  of  the  fire- 
light and  there  was  a  buzz  of  happy  voices.  From  the  kitchen  came  the 
rattle  of  cups  and  certain  willing  maidens  carried  in  steaming  coffee.  Every- 
body was  smiling.      What  friends  they  all  were ! 

The  women  of  1910  were  the  first  to  hold  Senior  Singing.  Immediately 
they  realized  the  inadequacy  of  Hearst  Hall  for  the  purpose,  as  there  was  sel- 
dom an  evening  when  it  was  not  used  for  something  else.  They  began  to 
raise  money  by  entertainments  and  subscriptions  for  a  hall  of  their  own, 
and  the  women  of  191 1  continued  the  work  faithfully.  Miss  Julia  Morgan 
contributed  the  plans  for  the  hall,  which  was  finally  built  in  the  summer  of 
191 1,  under  the  supervision  of  Miss  Hazel  Jordan,  '10,  chairman  of  the  build- 
ing committee. 

The  women  of  1912  have  been  the  first  to  enjoy  Senior  Women's  Hall. 
If  asked  what  has  impressed  them  most  they  would  probably  answer,  its 
possibilities.  Each  Senior  Singing  they  have  appreciated  more  and  more 
what  opportunities  it  affords,  this  center  of  the  California  feminine — this 
second  heart  of  the  University. 


THE    MASQUERADE 

Prytanean  Fete 

HE   annual    fete   was   held   by   the    members   of   the    Prytanean 
Society  on  February  10th,  in  Harmon  Gymnasium.      An  after- 
noon program  was  dispensed  with  in  order  to  afford  more  time 
in  preparation  of  the  Partheneia,  but  the  Mardi  Gras  Ball  was 
given  as  usual  in  the  evening. 
The  decorative  scheme  was  black  and  gold,  Prytanean  colors,  with  greens 
containing  the  stage  and  the  lights  shaded  softly  with  yellow.    Various  booths 
for   the   sale   of   candies,   ice-cream,   punch   and   favors   did   an   encouraging 
business. 
166 


^§5 

<3 

Hu 

i£%&\ 

B&3 

zfEl 

THE    COLLEGE    YEAR 


AN   EXCITING    MOMENT 


Woman's  Day 

EBRUARY  22,  following"  tradition,  the  Campus  assumed  a  femi- 
nine aspect,  in  honor  of  what  has  been  known  for  several 
years  as  Woman's  Day.  College  publications  were  edited  and 
managed  by  women,  who  throughout  the  term  had  been  proving 
their  capability.  Catherine  Walker  was  editor-in-chief  of  the 
Occident,  Dorothy  Fish  of  the  Pelican,  Edith  Pence  of  the  Daily  Caiifornian. 
Athletic  events  were  held  during  the  morning  and  afternoon.  An  inter- 
class  regatta  occured  on  Lake  Merritt  and  immediately  after  a  basket-ball 
game  was  held  for  the  purpose  of  trying  out  material  for  the  Nevada  game 
in  March.  The  fencing  contest  with  the  Stanford  team  was  very  close  and 
no  result  was  announced. 


THE   JUNIOR   CREW 


167 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

Charter  Day 

ORTY-FOUR  years  ago  the  College  of  California  turned  over 
its  assets,  material  and  otherwise,  to  the  new-born  University. 
It  was  in  celebration  and  commemoration  of  this  fact  that 
March  23rd — Charter  Day — was  set  apart  as  a  day  marked  off 
from  other  days  by  outward  display  and  an  inward  sense  of 
renewed  loyalty. 

It  was  especially  fitting,  upon  the  day  when  the  magnificent  new  Doe 
Library  was  to  be  dedicated  and  formally  received  as  a  unit  of  the  Univ.er- 


ENTERING    THE    GREEK    THEATRE 


sity,  that  Dr.  Herbert  Putnam  should  be  the  speaker.  He  is  himself  a  librarian 
of  note,  holding  as  he  does  the  position  of  Dean  of  the  Congressional  Library 
in  Washington. 

Faculty,  Regents  and  Alumni  assembled  at  the  Doe  Library,  and  at  10 
o'clock  the  body  started  in  columns  of  twos  to  the  Greek  Theatre,  where 
students  and  visitors  were  already  seated.  The  procession,  solemn  and 
dignified  as  it  was,  impressed  one  with  the  more  serious  meaning  of  the 
clay. 

After  the  invocation,  pronounced  by  Rev.  A.  W.  Palmer,  '01,  and  the 
rendition  of  "The  Heavens  Declare"  by  the  University  Chorus,  President 
Wheeler  spoke.  He  told  of  the  numerous  gifts  the  University  had  received 
during  the  year  just  past.  He  thanked  the  benefactors  for  the  University, 
referring  to  Mrs.  Hearst  in  particular  as  a  staunch  friend  of  California. 


168 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

Dr.  Putnam  was  introduced  by  President  Wheeler.  His  address,  "The 
Quick  and  the  Dead,"  dealt  with  the  lasting  value  of  the  printed  page ;  the 
never-ending  worth  of  the  book  and  of  the  library.  He  particularly  em- 
phasized the  fact  that  every  book  has  its  place  in  the  world  of  human  knowl- 
edge, and  contended  that  no  one  work  is  to  be  condemned  because  it  deals 
with  a  narrow  or  technical  subject. 

Doe  Library  was  the  terminal  of  the  recessional  march.  Here  Li- 
brarian J.  C.  Rowell  opened  the  dedication  services  with  a  review  of  the 
history  of  the  University  and  the  growth  in  importance  of  its  library.  Dr. 
Putnam  dwelt  on  government  aid  to  libraries,  while  Mr.  Loring  Doe  spoke 
for  the  donor,  recalling  his  life  and  his  ambition  to  be  of  service  to  the  world 
by  building  a  truly  great  library.  The  ceremony  ended  with  an  illuminating 
prophecy  of  the  future  function  of  Doe  Library  in  the  machinery  of  the 
University  of  California.  President  Wheeler  predicted  that  the  building 
would  be  the  center  of  the  scholastic  university  of  the  future  in  a  physical 
as  well  as  an  intellectual  sense. 

In  the  evening  Doe  Library  was  crowded  with  those  who  had  taken 
advantage  of  the  invitation  of  the  Regents  to  attend  the  Charter  Day  recep- 
tion. President  and  Mrs.  Wheeler,  Dr.  Putnam  and  members  of  the  Regents 
and  Faculty  received. 

It  was  a  significant  Charter  Day.  Not  only  was  California's  nativity 
fittingly  commemorated,  but  a  great  and  noble  building  was  formally  received 
into  the  University. 


y 

■ 
1        H- ^L  ~ 

-   - 

AT    THE    DOE    LIBRARY 


169 


K§> 

^3 

S8 

THE    COLLEGE    YEAR 

The  Partheneia 

HE  most  notable  achievement  of  the  students  of  the  University 
of  California  in  1912  was  the  presentation  of  The  Partheneia, 
.  I  Masque  of  Maidenhood,  by  Miss  Anna  Rearden,  a  Senior  in  the 
College  of  Letters.  This  spectacle,  wrought  with  delicate  sym- 
bolical consistency  to  represent  the  transition  from  girlhood  to 
womanhood,  the  sorrow  and  the  hope,  came  like  quiet  magic  to  the  little  band  of 
enthusiasts  assembled  by  Miss  Lucy  Sprague,  the  Dean  of  Women,  as  judges  of 
a  competition  designed  to  stimulate  the  women  students  of  the  University  in  the 
production  of  some  dramatic  spectacle  to  be  fulfilled  with  beauty  and  informed 
with  memorial  ritual.  It  is  enough  to  say  that  Miss  Rearden's  scenario  silenced 
on  the  lips  of  the  most  academic  the  epithet  "undergraduate." 

Under  the  spell  of  Miss  Sprague's  superb  energy  and  dramatic  enthusiasm, 
and  with  the  rare  help  of  Mr.  Porter  Garnett's  versatile  technique  in  plays 
'  out-of-doors,  the  women  students  united  in  a  delightful  spirit  of  creative  sympathy. 
By  a  gray  altar  under  the  low-boughed  oaks,  "at  the  quiet-colored  end  of 
afternoon,"  the  parti-colored  apparitions  streamed  in :  Maidenhood,  the  regal 
guardian,  in  blue,  "helmeted  in  shining  bronze,"  girls  who  entered  in  laughter  and 
play  to  find  sorrow  in  the  reality  of  life,  but  to  learn  tempered  joy  under  the  min- 
istrations of  Nobility,  Joy-in-Life  and  Service ;  Hope,  with  her  arms  full  of  white 
flowers,  Dryads  from  the  grove  of  eucalyptus  trees  beyond,  water-sprites  leaping 
up  from  the  deep  bed  of  the  stream  that  loitered  by,  buttercup,  cyclamen,  columbine, 
trillium,  poppy,  stealing  from  the  shelter  of  the  leaf-spirits ;  Light  flashing  in 
with  her  gorgeous  retinue.  As  the  gay  concourse  thronged  from  the  scene  in 
joyous  procession,  the  last  shaft  of  the  sun  followed  the  last  retreating  figure, 
Light. 

The  music  was  happily  chosen  from  the  compositions  of  Edward  MacDowell, 
who  has  so  subtly  interpreted  both  natura  maligna  and  natura  benigna  in  America. 
The  harmony  of  masque  and  music  can  be  appreciated  only  by  those  who  saw  the 
stately  Spirits  of  the  Past,  Saint  Elizabeth,  Beatrice,  Lady  Jane  Grey,  Joan  of 
Arc;  move  by  the  altar  with  gracious  gifts,  while  the  violins  dreamed  over  those 
phrases  from  the  "Keltic  Sonata"  in  which  MacDowell  has  thought  of  Deirdre, 
and  only  by  those  who  heard  the  clear  voice  of  Miss  Constance  Davis  sing 
perfectly  the  "Song  of  Hope"  to  the  melody  of  "To  a  Wild  Rose." 

All  the  dawns  that  shall  be 
Lie  like  half-closed  flowers, 
Dewy  from  dark  hours, 
Waiting  for  thee. 

170 


THE  COLLEGE  YEAR 

Thro'  the  great  starless  night, 
Sleep  and  I  soft  treading — 
Fragrance  shedding — 
Lull  thee  till  light. 

Winds  at  last,  blowing  cold, 
Whisper  low  of  daybreak; 
All  my  dawnflowers  wake 
Showering  their  gold. 

Close  thy  drowsy  eyes, 
Fairy    dreams    I    bring   thee, 
Age-old  lullabies, 
Forest-crooned,  I'll  sing  thee, 
Softer,  slower,  sing  thee 
Sleep  ....  Sleep  till  dawn. 


Herbert  E.  Cory 


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DEBATING 


DEBATING 


Intercollegiate  Debate 

ALIFORNIA  established  her  supremacy  over  the  Cardinal  for 
the  nth  time  in  the  nineteen  years  of  intercollegiate  debating-  on 
Friday  evening,  November  3,  191 1.  In  a  series  of  strong  and 
well-balanced  arguments,  the  California  team,  composed  of  H. 
H.  Phleger,  '12,  L.  E.  Goodman,  '13,  and  T.  B.  Kittredge,  '12, 
easily  defeated  Stanford  in  her  own  auditorium.  California  upheld  the  affirma- 
tive of  the  question :  "Resolved,  That  judges  should  be  exempt  from  recall. 
Stanford,  for  the  negative,  was  represented  by  W.  E.  Simpson,  H.  S.  Higgins 
and  W.  B.  Owens.  A  large  Stanford  audience,  presided  over  by  Prof.  Frederick 
C.  Woodward,  head  of  the  Cardinal  law  department,  listened  to  the  discussion. 
The  decision  was  awarded  in  favor  of  California  by  a  majority  vote  of  the 
board  of  judges,  which  was  composed  of  Mr.  Fairfax  H.  Wheelan,  Mr.  Frank 
P.  Morton  and  Rev.  Joseph  M.  Gleason. 

H.  H.  Phleger  opened  the  affirmative  case  by  plunging  directly  into  the  con- 
structive argument.  The  defects  of  our  present  judicial  system  were  carefully 
classified  under  the  general  heads  of  inefficiency  and  corruption.  It  was  then 
clearly  pointed  out  and  hammered  home  that  the  popular  recall  would  not  in  any 
wise  remedy  the  first-named  weakness  and  would  only  prove  a  check  upon  the 
most  flagrant  cases  of  corruption. 

W.  E.  Simpson,  the  first  of  the  Stanford  speakers  to  take  the  floor,  devoted 
most  of  the  twenty  minutes  allowed  him  in  enumerating  specific  examples  of  dis- 
honest and  incapable  judges  on  the  bench,  and  in  giving  instances  of  corruption. 
The  recall,  of  course,  was  brought  forward  as  the  most  effective  remedy  for 
existing  evils. 


174 


DEBATING 

In  reply  to  this  attack,  L.  E.  Goodman  showed  that  the  recall  would  not  reach 
the  two  classes  of  objectionable  judges  which  should  be  removed  from  office, 
namely,  the  clever  corrupt  judge  and  the  stupid  popular  judge.  The  speaker  then 
turned  to  some  of  the  evils  which  arise  directly  from  the  recall  itself  and  pointed 
out  that  the  popular  mind  could  not  be  relied  upon  to  make  equitable  decisions, 
since,  of  necessity,  particular  cases  merely  would  be  considered  rather  than  the 
career  and  character  of  the  man. 

H.  S.  Higgins,  as  the  second  negative  speaker,  complained  of  the  present 
methods  of  removal  as  being  ineffective  and  undesirable,  declaring  that  in  the 
whole  history  of  our  State  not  a  single  judge  has  been  removed  by  a  two-thirds 
vote  of  our  Legislature. 

T.  B.  Kittredge  came  back  warmly  for  the  affirmative  in  his  incisive  argu- 
ments for  the  independence  of  the  judiciary  and  was  imperative  in  his  demands 
that  the  judge,  being  a  technical  officer,  had  best  be  appointed  by  the  Governor. 
The  appointive  system  would  place  the  responsibility  for  the  character  of  the 
judiciary  in  the  hands  of  one  official,  the  Governor. 

In  closing  the  negative  case,  W.  B.  Owens  admitted  many  of  the  advantages 
of  the  appointive  system,  but  objected  seriously  to  removal  by  the  Legislature. 
He  continued  among  other  remarks  to  argue  that  the  people  could  be  relied  upon 
for  a  judicious  use  of  the  recall. 

The  task  of  refuting  the  negative  case  and  summarizing  that  of  the  affirmative 
was  delegated  to  H.  H.  Phleger.  The  work  was  effectively  and  forcibly  done. 
Without  weakening  his  position  in  the  least,  Phleger  was  able  to  close  with 
the  following:  "We  can  admit  almost  everything  which  the  negative  has  stated 
as  to  our  present  needs.  Our  plan  of  appointment  would  give  more  efficient,  more 
independent  judges,  and  judges  who  would  be  just  and  honest." 

Upper  Division  Bonnheim  Contest 

T.  J.  Ledwich,  '12,  was  accorded  the  decision  in  the  Upper  Division  Bonn- 
heim Discussion,  held  Saturday  evening,  December  9,  191 1.  The  four  winners 
of  the  preliminary  prizes — T.  J.  Ledwich,  '12;  H.  C.  Kelly,  '12;  L.  R.  Bates, 
'13,  and  H.  J.  Weldon,  '13 — met  for  the  final  contest. 

"The  Moral  Obligations  of  a  Citizen  as  Regards  Membership  in  a 
Political  Party"  was  the  subject  of  the  evening.  Rev.  Smith,  of  the  Unitarian 
Church  of  Berkeley ;  P.  T.  Tompkins,  '92,  and  W.  H.  Gorrill,  acted  as  judges. 
President  Wheeler  was  the  presiding  officer  of  the  evening. 


175 


DEBATING 


T.    B.    KITTREDGE 


L.  E.  GOODMAN 


MILTON    MARKS 


Carnot  Debate 

For  the  third  time  in  three  consecutive  years  a  California  man  has  been 
the  victor  in  the  Carnot  Debate.  Milton  Marks,  '14,  was  awarded  the  medal 
in  this  year's  contest,  held  in  Harmon  Gymnasium,  Saturday  evening,  Febru- 
ary 3,  1912.  Stanford's  chain  of  successes  was  broken  into  by  N.  B.  Drury, 
'12,  who  won  the  medal  in  1910.  Through  the  work  of  F.  M.  Shipper,  '12, 
we  brought  home  the  medal  to  California  in  the  following  year,  and  for  the 
third  time,  by  reason  of  Mark's  excellent  work,  we  have  carried  the  day. 
Besides  our  victories  in  the  Carnot  contest  our  teams  have  taken  the  laurels 
in  the  last  four  intercollegiate  debates.  This  totals  for  California  seven 
successive  victories  over  Stanford  in  the  field  of  debate. 

The  Carnot  team  which  met  Stanford  this  year  was  composed  of  Milton 
Marks,  '14,  L.  E.  Goodman,  '13,  and  T.  B.  Kittredge,  '12. 

Stanford's  team  was  made  up  of  C.  E.  Smith,  '14,  K.  E.  Leib,  '13,  and 
E.  E.  Tincher,  '12. 

The  specific  question  laid  before  the  several  speakers  was  announced 
to  them  at  6  o'clock  on  the  evening  of  the  contest.  It  read  as  follows : 
"Resolved,  that  in  the  recent  rearrangement  of  the  French  Cabinet,  Delcasse 
should  have  been  assigned  to  the  ministry  of  foreign  affairs."  The  drawing 
for  side  and  order  of  speaking  resulted  as  follows:  Milton  Marks  (C), 
affirmative;  T.  B.  Kittredge  (C),  negative;  L.  E.  Goodman  (C),  affirmative; 
C.  E.  Smith  (S),  negative;  K.  E.  Leib  (S),  affirmative,  and  E.  E.  Tincher  (S). 
negative. 

Milton  Marks,  as  the  first  speaker  of  the  evening,  set  a  standard  of 
delivery  and  argument  that  his   fellow  debaters  were   unable  to   duplicate. 

176 


DEBATING 

From  the  beginning  he  was  the  obvious  winner.  He  opened  his  discussion 
by  a  clear  and  comprehensive  exposition  of  French  relations  at  the  present 
time.  He  pictured  her  as  being  involved  in  a  great  struggle  with  Germany 
in  which  she  has  risen  from  a  humiliating  subjugation,  as  the  result  of  the 
Franco-Prussian  war,  to  a  great  diplomatic  mastery  in  the  outcome  of  the 
late  Moroccan  dispute.  The  strength  of  France,  he  went  on  to  show,  lies  in 
alliances  and  not  in  arms.  From  this  viewpoint  it  is  seen  that  Delcasse,  by 
making  alliances  of  great  strength  and  advantage,  has  shown  himself  to  be 
a  diplomatist  of  inestimable  value  to  the  nation.  Thus  the  logical  conclusion 
was  reached  that  Delcasse  is  the  man  needed  by  France  to  guide  her  in  foreign 
affairs.     Marks  excelled  particularly  in  his  later  speech  of  refutation. 

T.  B.  Kittredge  followed  for  the  negative.  He  emphasized  the  need  of 
France  to  follow  a  plan  of  "wise  conciliation"  in  order  to  win  Germany  to  a 
position  of  friendship  and  thus  remove  the  great  menace  of  a  hostile  Germany. 
To  place  Delcasse,  with  his  pronounced  anti-German  policies,  at  the  head 
of  the  nation's  foreign  affairs,  would  frustrate  any  such  plan  of  conciliation 
and  would  be  inimical  to  French  interests. 

L.  E.  Goodman,  as  second  speaker  for  the  affirmative,  flayed  the  idea  of 
conciliation  as  being  a  plan  wholly  detrimental  to  France.  Under  such  a 
policy  he  pictured  France  as  feeding  cube  sugar  to  a  hungry  bear,  only  teach- 
ing the  beast  to  crave  more.  He  was  very  aggressive  in  his  argument,  es- 
pecially in  his  refutation,  and  advocated  Delcasse  as  a  statesman  of  sound 
policies  and  great  diplomatic  talent.  Goodman  was  probably  the  closest  con- 
tender of  Marks  for  the  honors. 

E.  C.  Smith  of  Stanford  delivered  a  logical  and  well  constructed  argu- 
ment for  the  negative,  but  he  showed  traces  of  nervousness,  and  his  delivery 
and  poise  while  before  his  audience  was  weak.  His  inability  to  hold  his  hear- 
ers and  to  drive  home  the  points  of  a  well  constructed  discourse  lost  him  his 
chances. 

K.  E.  Leib  of  Stanford  followed  for  the  affirmative.  He  made  a  very 
creditable  showing,  with  a  pleasing  delivery  and  a  clear  emphasis  of  his 
points. 

E.  E.  Tincher,  the  last  speaker,  excelled  both  of  his  Stanford  colleagues. 
He  started  with  a  very  clear  outline  of  an  able  speech,  but  showed  a  tendency 


177 


DEBATING 

toward  weakness  in  the  substantiations  of  his  contentions.  He  took  the 
position  that  Delcasse's  past  did  not  warrant  his  continuation  in  the  office  in 
which  the  affirmative  desired  him  placed. 

The  judges  who  awarded  the  medal  were  Hon.  Lucien  Shaw,  Rev.  A.  \V 
Palmer,  and  Mr.  J.  S.  Tobin.      Judge  Shaw  announced  the  verdict  in  a  strik- 
ingly  brief   speech.      He   said:     "The   judges   have    selected   as    winner   of 
tonight's    discussion,    Mr.    Milton    Marks.       I   have   here   the    Carnot    medal, 
which  I  take  pleasure  in  presenting  to  him." 


THE    CARNOT     MEDAL 


Freshman  -  Sophomore  Debate 

In  the  annual  interclass  debate,  held  on  the  evening  of  March  21,  1912, 
the  Sophomore  debaters  were  victorious.  The  winners  upheld  the  negative 
side  of  the  question — "Resolved,  that  Porto  Rico  should  be  admitted  as  a 
State  in  the  near  future."  The  Sophomores  were  represented  by  L.  L.  Levy, 
W.  G.  Marvin  and  M.  J.  Bleuel,  with  A.  W.  Drury  as  alternate.  Mr.  Blan- 
chard,  of  the  English  Department ;  Professor  Daggett,  of  the  Department  of 
Economics,  and  Attorney  Morton,  of  Berkeley,  officiated  as  judges. 

Senate-Congress  Debate 

The  Senate  and  Congress  Debating  Societies  met  in  their  annual  contest 
April  3,  1912.  In  upholding  the  negative  of  the  question,  "Resolved,  that  the 
United  States  should  fortify  the  Panama  Canal,"  the  Congress  team  was 
adjudged  victorious  by  a  unanimous  decision  of  the  judges.  The  Congress 
was  represented  by  F.  D.  Stephens,  '13,  L.  E.  Goodman,  '13,  and  Milton  Marks, 
'14.  The  Senate  team  was  made  up  of  A.  W.  Drury,  '14,  A.  H.  Conard,  '13, 
and  Paul  Fleming,  '13.  The  judges  for  the  evening  were  Professor  \\  ells 
and  Mr.  Blanchard,  of  the  English  Department,  and  Professor  Kidd,  of  the 
Department  of  Jurisprudence.  F.  M.  Shipper,  president  of  the  Debating 
Council,  acted  as  the  presiding  officer. 

178 


DEBATING 


Peace  Prize  Discussion 


A.  W.  Drury,  '14,  was  announced  the  winner  of  the  third  annual  Peace  Prize 
Discussion,  held  in  Hearst  Hall  on  September  21,  191 1.  For  the  third  time  the 
Northern  California  Peace  Society  presented  fifty  dollars  to  the  student  rendering 
the  best  discussion  on  any  phase  of  the  subject  of  international  peace.  Milton 
Marks,  '14,  was  chosen  as  the  second  best  speaker. 

Lower  Division  Bonnheim  Discussion 

William  G.  Marvin,  '14,  was  adjudged  the  winner  of  the  Lower  Division 
Bonnheim  Discussion,  held  in  Hearst  Hall,  April  29,  191 1.  The  topic  of  the  dis- 
cussion was :  "The  Honor  System  in  Examinations."  The  three  other  prize 
winners  in  the  written  essay  contest  who  competed  with  Marvin  were,  Miss 
Susanna  I.  Martin,  '14,  H.  J.  Weldon,  '13,  and  A.  P.  Hayne,  '13.  The  judges 
who  awarded  the  prize  of  fifty  dollars  were,  Mayor  Beverly  L.  Hodghead,  Mr. 
Frederic  Torrey,  and  Professor  E.  W.  Wilbur. 

The  growth  of  the  "honor  system"  as  applied  to  all  phases  of  college  life  was 
thoroughly  treated  by  the  winner.  Special  stress  was  then  laid  upon  the  system 
as  applied  to  examinations  and  its  influence  in  developing  the  self-control,  honesty 
and  general  character  of  the  student  was  carefully  brought  out. 


179 


RALLIES 


RALLIES 


FRESHMEN     AT    WORK 


Piece  by  piece,  throughout  the  fall  term,  John  R.  Ouinn,  yell  leader,  and 
Herb  Kelly,  chairman  of  the  rally  committee,  built  up  the  huge  bomb  of 
college  spirit  which  drove  away  the  last  vestige  of  Stanford's  football  hopes 
by  its  deafening  explosion  at  the  big  game  last  November.  The  thanks  of  the 
student  body  are  due  these  men  and  their  able  assistants  for  the  hard  work 
they  did  in  uniting  the  student  body  in  its  support  of  the  team  that  once  again 
defeated  Stanford. 

Freshman  Rally 

XPOSITION  CLASS,  as  Professor  Stephens  termed  the  Class  of 
191 5  in  the  main  speech  of  the  evening,  was  welcomed  to  the 
University  of  California  at  the  Freshman  Rally  on  September 
the  8th.  Crouched  about  the  huge  bonfire  they  had  built,  the 
P"reshmen  listened  to  words  of  advice  and  friendship  from  X.  B. 
Drury.  '12,  president  of  the  A.  S.  U.  C. ;  Varsity  Football  Captain  Amos 
Elliott,  and  lastly  from  Professor  Henry  Morse  Stephens,  whose  annual 
address  to  the  freshmen  has  come  to  be  one  of  the  notable  events  of  the 
college  year.  Between  the  speeches  the  freshmen  received  their  first  touch 
of  the  California  spirit  as  they  listened  to  or  joined  in  the  yells  that  crashed 
through  the  night  air,  and  heard  for  the  first  time  the  enthusiastic  sing- 
ing of  "Boola."  When  the  fire  had  burned  to  embers  and  the  last  speaker 
had  concluded,  the  serpentine  began.  The  four  classes  danced  their  way 
about  the  Greek  Theatre  and  from  there  to  the  Gym.  steps,  where  "All  Hail" 
and  a  final  big  oski  brought  the  evening  to  a  close. 


182 


RALLIES 


Pajamarino  Rally 

ERHAPS  never  before  in  the  history  of  California  was  there 
such  a  rally  as  the  annual  evening  dress  affair,  held  in  191 1, 
on  the  night  of  September  thirtieth,  in  the  Greek  Theatre. 

Each  class  was  costumed ;  each  had  its  "stunt" ;  each  strove 
to  outdo  the  others  in  originality  and  general  display  of  "pep." 
The  Senior  "joys"  and  "glooms,"  the  green-clad  Juniors,  the  Sophomore 
"devils,"  the  Freshmen,  clad  in  blue  and  gold — all  united  to  make  the  rally 
the  most  colorful  and  kaleidoscopic  in  years. 

The  speakers — Professors  Setchell  and  Reed,  "Jimmie"  Schaeffer  and 
Amos  Elliott — gave  talks  of  the  right  sort ;  the  musical  selections  were  of 
the  best ;  there  was  an  indefinable  spirit  of  fellowship  in  the  air,  and,  what's 
more,  the  rally  was  a  complete  and  final  success. 

First  Impromptu  Rally 

F  ever  there  is  an  occasion  on  which  California  spirit  shows 
itself  in  all  its  strength  and  fervor,  it  is  when  it  breaks  forth  in 
a  spontaneous  rally,  unconstrained  by  the  presence  of  specta- 
tors and  unhampered  by  a  set  program  of  stunts.  Such  an 
outburst  of  pent-up  enthusiasm  and  loyalty  was  the  rally  of 
September  15th,  which  awoke  the  Campus  from  the  lethargy  of  over- 
confidence  and  urged  it  forward  in  its  work  of  helping  the  team  through  a 
successful,  but  none  the  less  arduous,  football  season.  The  rally  started 
with  a  few  oskis  after  Senior  singing,  and  continued  as  a  serpentine  wound 
about  the  Campus,  constantly  adding  to  its  numbers  all  those  who  were 
fortunate  enough  to  be  within  hearing.  It  made  its  way  to  the  region  north 
of  the  Campus,  dragged  Captain  Elliott  forth  and  heard  a  few  stirring  remarks 
from  him ;  chanced  to  cross  the  path  of  President  Wheeler,  who  aroused 
the  excitement  to  a  fever  heat  by  a  few  hearty  words  of  praise  and  encourage- 
ment, and  finally  circled  back  to  North  Hall  steps,  where  various  men, 
prominent  in  student  affairs  and  athletics,  spoke  the  message  of  determina- 
tion and  fight  that  was  to  mark  the  football  season  of  191 1. 

Freshman  Smoker 

HAT  an  intercollegiate  contest  is  not  considered  an  inter- 
collegiate contest  unless  it  be  with  Stanford  was  pretty  con- 
clusively demonstrated  by  the  small  crowd  and  lack  of  spirit 
at  the  Freshman  Smoker  rally  which  preceded  the  game  with 
U.  S.  C.  The  speakers,  Charlie  Volz,  Louie  Watts  and  Captain 
Elliott,  dwelt  on  the  necessity  for  bleacher  enthusiasm  at  the  game,  where 
a  Freshman  team  was  to  fight  a  practically  unknown  opponent,  and  conse- 
quently where  every  ounce  of  help  might  be  needed. 

184 


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RALLIES 


Varsity  Smoker  Rally 

FINAL  Varsity  Rally,  even  in  our  bleakest  years  is  a  big  thing, 
the  culmination  of  that  intangible  something  we  call  college 
spirit,  which  so  glorifies  and  rejuvenates  our  work-a-day  Uni- 
versity life.  But  when  every  prospect  is  full  of  hope,  when  we 
know  our  team  is  of  the  best  and  the  chances  are  a  trifle  more 
than  even,  the  combination  of  our  loyalty,  gratitude  and  enthusiasm  makes  a 
rally  whose  spirit  is  far  beyond  description.  Such  was  the  last  football  rally 
of  191 1.  Throughout  the  evening  the  wildest  enthusiasm  held  sway,  and  with 
the  appearance  of  the  Varsity  it  reached  a  point  such  as  many  of  us  will  prob- 
ably never  again  witness.  A  prolonged  uproar  of  cheers  shook  the  roof  of 
old  Harmon  as  it  has  seldom  been  shaken  before.  Pandemonium  reigned 
and  none  cared  to  stop  it. 

The  speakers  of  the  evening,  among  whom  was  John  R.  Glascock,  all 
dwelt  on  the  lurking  danger  in  the  brightness  of  our  chances,  and  warned 
the  rooters  to  be  ready  every  minute  with  their  support. 


Congratulation  Rally 

CONGRATULATION  RALLY,  an  annual  event,  was  held  the 
Monday  after  the  game,  and  was  characterized  by  the  usual 
bashfulness  on  the  part  of  the  team,  and  the  consequent  strenu- 
ous efforts  of  the  yell  leader  and  his  assistants  to  capture  them 
and  make  them  speak.  The  most  notable  feature  of  the  rally 
was  the  talk  of  President  Wheeler,  in  which  he  spoke  of  the  men  of  the  team 
as  "Good  Californians  whom  all  University  men  would  do  well  to  pattern 
after,"  and  in  which  he  also  started  a  wave  of  Rugby,  which  for  a  while  spread 
to  the  remotest  corner  of  the  campus  and  had  every  able-bodied  Cailfornian 
chasing  "the  elusive  pigskin." 


Track  Rally 

ALIFORXIA'S  track  team  was  given  its  final  send-off  at  Har- 
mon Gymnasium  on  the  night  of  April  18th.  Old  track  cap- 
tains told  of  the  past  and  predicted  victory  in  the  future ;  a 
spirit  of  confidence  was  in  the  air  which  had  its  justification  on 
the  Stanford  oval  two  days  later.  Enthusiasm  ran  riot,  and 
that  California  spirit  which  carried  all  before  it  in  November  cropped  out  in 
visible  form  everywhere. 

The  rally  broke  up  with  the  serpentine  on  the  old  baseball  field. 


187 


PUBLICATIONS 


PUBLICATIONS 


E.    M.    EINSTEIN 


M.   A.   CARTVVRIGHT 


R.   L.   SHURTLEFF 


Daily  Californian 

Under  the  guidance  of  a  competent  staff  and  the  supervision  of  the  A.  S. 
U.  C.  the  Daily  Californian  has,  during  the  past  year,  successfully  continued  its 
policy  of  giving  all  the  news  all  the  time.  Representing  neither  clique  nor  faction 
it  has  rendered  unbiased  information  on  all  college  matters,  and  through  its 
editorial  columns  has  been  a  potent  factor  in  the  development  of  student  body 
opinion.      Its  circulation  includes  all  members  of  the  A.  S.  U.  C. 

Unlike  other  student  dailies,  the  work  of  publication  has  been  so  system- 
atized that  all  drudgery  and  responsibility  does  not  rest  on  the  shoulders  of  the 
editor  alone.  Two  associates,  assisted  by  several  Freshmen,  and  under  the 
supervision  of  a  news  editor,  have  complete  charge  of  each  issue.  The  editor, 
however,  is  the  general  executive  and  writes  all  editorials. 

The  Daily  Californian  is  now  on  a  paying  basis,  and  because  of  its  extensive 
advertising  columns,  nets  the  student  body  $1000  profit  annually.  It  has  passed 
out  of  the  embryo  state  and,  both  from  a  financial  and  literary  standpoint,  is 
one  of  the  best  college  journals  in  the  country. 

The  staff  for  the  foregoing  year  follows : 

First  Term:  Editor,  E.  M.  Einstein,  '12;  Managing  Editor,  M.  A.  Cartwright,  '12; 
Woman's  Editor,  Miss  Edith  Pence,  '12;  Business  Manager,  R.  L.  Shurtleff,  '12. 

Second  Term:  Editor,  M.  A.  Cartwright,  '12;  Managing  Editor,  J.  L.  Simpson, 
'13;  Woman's   Editor,   Miss   Edith   Pence,  '12;   Business   Manager,   R.   L.   Shurtleff,   '12. 

News  Editors:  J.  R.  Douglas,  '13;  E.  H.  Trout,  R.  R.  Randall,  '13;  H.  C.  Mc- 
Clelland, '13;  J.  L.  Simpson,  '13. 

Associate  Editors:  W.  C.  Binkley,  '14;  R.  M.  Eaton,  '14;  P.  L.  Edwards,  '14; 
C.  A.  Edwards,  '14;  D.  C.  Baker,  '14;  J.  Kalousdian,  '14;  L.  W.  Georgeson,  '14;  R.  C. 
Ogden,  '14;  J.  H.  Quire,  '14;  E.  Von  Allmen,  '14;  O.  L.  Haines,  '14. 

190 


PUBLICATIONS 


California  Occident 

Standardization  has  been  the  aim  of  the  California  Occident  during  the 
past  year.  Already  established  on  a  firm  foundation,  it  has  been  the  object 
of  the  staff  to  improve  the  magazine  in  both  appearance  and  subject  matter. 

Editor,  Arne  K.  Hoisholt,  '12;  Woman's  Day  Editor,  Miss  Catherine  Walker,  '12; 
Managing  Editor,  Lloyd  Myers,  '13;  Literary  Editor,  Miss  Evelyn  Steel,  '13;  Art 
Editor,  Roy  Neily,  '13. 

Literary  Board — Dr.  George  A.  Smithson ;  Rose  Gardner,  '11;  Edith  Pence,  '12; 
Catherine  Walker,  '12;    Nelson  Hackett,  '12,  and  Lonis  Jackson,  '12. 

Associate  Editors — Raymond  Jeans,  '13;  Mary  De  Witt,  '13;  Margaret  Hodgen, 
'13;  Margery  Glass,  '13;  Emma  Black,  '13;   Enid  Watkins,  '13. 

Assistant  Editors — Roland  Foerster,  '14;  Warren  Lane,  '14;  Sarah  Hammond,  '14; 
Marjorie  Sutherland,  '14;  Hilda  Brandenstein,  '14;  Lawrence  Levy,  '14;  Harold  Frasier, 
'14;    Anne  Squier.  '14. 

Business  Staff — Manager,  Albert  A.  Hinchman,  Jr.,  '14  (first  semester);  Harold  A. 
Fletcher,  '12  (second  semester).  , 

California  Pelican 

Excelling  in  both  quality  and  size,  the  Peli- 
can during  the  past  year  has  shown  a  distinct 
advance.  Not  only  has  the  subject-matter  been 
improved  upon,  but  the  appearance  of  the  maga- 
zine, as  well,  exceeds  all  previous  attempts. 

Each  issue  is  featured  by  well-selected  and 
tasteful  cartoons,  while  new  joshes  and  comical 
stories  form  an  endless  and  novel  variation  of 
subject-matter.  a. 

Editor,   Monroe    L.    Dinkelspiel,  '12;    Managing   Editor,    Raymond   W.   J 
Manager,  Albert  J.  Evers,  '11. 


M.    L.    DINKELSPIEL 


J.     EVERS 

eans,  '13; 


191 


1913  BLUE  AND  GOLD 

Editorial  Staff 

EDITOR 
Clare  Morse  Torrey 

MANAGING  EDITORS 

John  Lowrey  Simpson,  in  charge  of  Copy 
James  Roy  Douglas,  in  charge  of  Printing. 
Edgar  Francis  Sullivan,  in  charge  of  Photographs 
Barbara  Grace  Nachtrieb,  in  charge  of  Art. 

ASSISTANT  EDITORS 

Hudson  Packer  Hibeard  )  .       ,  .  _  .    . 

t-  TT  t-,  ,,,,      -in  charge  of  Printing 

Francis  Harrington  Partridge,    14     j 

LITERARY  BOARD 

Lyman  Grimes 
Hudson   Packer  Hibbard  Evelyn  Steel 

UNIVERSITY 

Charles  Wade  Snook 
Emma  Frances  Black  Charles  William  Heyer,  Jr. 

THE  CLASSES 
Enid  North  Watkins  Lewis  Morris  Foulke 

COLLEGE  YEAR 

Robert  Gordon  Sproul 
Margaret  Trabue  Hodgen         Arlo  Verner  Turner 
Evelyn  Agnes  Steel  Edward  Huntsman-Trout 

SOCIETY 
Ada  Cline 

DRAMATICS 
Roswell  Gray  Ham 

DEBATING 
John  Janney  Miller 

ATHLETICS 
Harry  Charles  McClelland 
Harriet  Stewart  Judd  Arthur  Eaton 

Rose  Rosalee  Farrell 


192 


PUBLICATIONS 

PUBLICATIONS 
John  Jacob  Beck 

ORGANIZATIONS 
Richard  Ray  Randall 
Myrtle  Lenore  Salsig  Frederick  Dorsey  Stephens 

Helen  de  Ette  Ayer 

FRATERNITIES 
In  a  Dorothy  Peterson  Nicholas  Lloyd  Taliaferro 

CLUBS 
Erle  Gladstone  Hill 
Elsiedora  Brinck  Edgar  Wallace  Dutton 

ART 

Barbara  Grace  Nachtrieb 
Gertrude  Elizabeth  Comfort    Godfrey  Bockins  Fletcher 
Frank  Veach  Mayo  Roy  McGregor  Neily 

Afong  Waianuenue  Heen 

STAFF  PHOTOGRAPHER 
Jolen  Endicott  Gardner,  Jr. 

JOSHES 
Lloyd  Arthur  Myers 
Raymond  William  Jeans         Florence  Louise  Wheeler 
Lloyd  Alexander  Sloane         Constance  Davis 
John  Thomas  Gribner  Ashley  Hearn   Conard 

Roland  Irving  Stringham        Donald  Knudsen  Lippincott 

Business  Staff 

R.  W.  Rust,  Manager 

ADVERTISING  MANAGERS 
George  Howard  Robinson"  William  Robert  Greig 

ASSOCIATES 
Margery  Ethel  Glass  Frederick  George  Linde 

Edwina  Fay  Frisbie  Frederick  Bloch 

Stanley  Fisk  Bryan 


193 


Bramattcs 


DRAMATICS 


l/^t§S 

^tS 

H 

2§S!I 

The  Spirit  of  the  Greek  Theatre 

HE  moon  creeps  up  from  behind  the  mass  of  stirring  eucalyptus, 
which  robes  the  theatre  in  dark  mystery.  The  night  is  slowly  with- 
drawn in  waves  of  retreating  shadow,  revealing  to  us  another  age, 
decked  in  the  trappings  of  an  ancient  day.  Here  is  the  City  of 
Rimini,  heaving  above  plot  and  rebellion ;  here  the  sheen  of  silk, 
rustling  of  trains,  dark  eyes  flashing  beneath  a  mist  of  veils,  clash  of  armor, 
unsheathing  of  daggers.  Here  is  the  spirit  of  cities,  quivering  with  vitality,  not 
before  a  canvas  screen  with  painted  streets,  but  amid  the  whirls  and  eddies  of  life. 
Here  beneath  this  Italian  moon  boils,  like  a  seething  devil's  cauldron,  into  its 
frightful  denouement  the  tragedy  of  "Paolo  and  Francesca."  Time  is  obliterated 
in  the  moan  of  Giovanni,  "Paolo,  Paolo,  my  little  Paolo!  "  Behind  the  pines  sinks 
the  moon,  leaving  in  our  hearts  the  dull  cry  burning  with  tragedy. 


195 


PAOLO  AND  FRANCESCA 


DRAMATICS 


An  Appreciation 

N  producing  Stephen  Phillips'  "Paolo  and  Francesca,"  the  English 
Club  has  successfully  accomplished  its  most  difficult  attempt  thus 
far.  Less  than  in  any  drama  so  far  given  could  the  players  take 
refuge  in  the  gorgeous  pageantry  the  Greek  Theatre  allows.  For, 
picturesque  and  striking  as  were  the  opening  and  closing  scenes, 
with  their  bridal  and  funeral  processions,  they  but  framed  the  play.  The  play  was 
the  thing,  the  most  intense  and  unvaried,  as  well  as  the  subtlest  in  our  list. 

By  the  same  token,  this  was  our  best  success.  The  club  has  done  several 
notable  things  — "Abraham  and  Isaac,"  "The  Winter's  Tale,"  "Nero,"  "Caesar 
and  Cleopatra" —  but  in  the  writer's  judgment  ( he  hadn't  the  good  fortune  to 
witness  "Caesar")  none  so  well.  Never  have  we  heard  the  noble  English  tongue 
so  well  pronounced  by  any  student  actors.  Mr.  Clewe's  reading  of  Paolo's  closing 
speech  filled  the  ear  with  the  music  of  those  splendid  lines.  Perhaps  the  loveliest 
and  the  most  significant  passage  in  the  play,  Francesca's 

"And  yet,  Nita,  and  yet  can  any 
say 
How  sorrow  first  doth  come?" 
etc., 

perfectly  pronounced  by  Miss 
Nachtrieb,  was  drowned  by  the 
college  clock,  which  at  that  mo- 
ment perversely  boomed  out  nine. 
But  each  and  every  member  of  the 
case  seemed  to  have  a  reverent 
and  intelligent  feeling  for  his 
lines,  as  well  for  their  lyrical 
beauty  as  for  their  dramatic  force. 
Each  had  learned  to  identify  him- 
self with  his  part,  and,  what  is  yet 
a  higher  thing,  had  learned  to 
blend  his  part  under  the  heat  of 
the  tragic  passion,  into  the  resist- 
less movement  of  the  action.  The 
tense  interest  of  the  audience  is 
witness  to  this.     Only  once  in  the 

"PAOLO  AND  FRANCESCA' 


197 


DRAMATICS 


evening,  in  the  great  scene  where 
Lucrezia  (Miss  Stone)  revealed  to 
Giovanni  (Mr.  Wilson)  the  name 
of  Francesca's  lover,  was  the  act- 
ing interrupted  by  applause,  and 
that  was  irresistible.  Yet  there 
were  other  moments  equally  im- 
pressive, if  not  equally  brilliant  — 
e.  g.,  the  two  love  scenes  between 
Paolo  and  Francesca,  especially 
the  garden  scene,  in  which  the 
lovers  read  together  the  story  of 
Launcelot  and  Guinevere.  Of  the 
comic  scenes,  it  is  enough  to  say 
that  they  were  just  broad  enough 
to  give  momentary  relief  from  the 
tragedy,  but  not  so  gross  as  to  in- 
trude themselves  upon  the  tragic 
interest  of  the  spectators. 

"Paolo  and  Francesca"  makes 
clearer  than  ever  before  the  func- 
tion of  the  Greek  Theatre  in  our 
college  dramatics,  and  in  the  in- 
tellectual life  of  the  University.  The  plays  which  we  select  each  semester,  espe- 
cially the  plays  which  the  committee  must  reject  as  unsuitable  for  one  reason  or 
another,  are  making  apparent  the  limitations,  no  less  than  the  opportunities  of 
that  unique  theatre.  It  is  evident,  of  course,  that  we  must  give  plays,  indoors  or 
out,  which  are  within  the  scope  of  amateurs,  that  we  cannot  compete  on  even 
terms  with  professional  actors  of  long  training  and  finish.  That  Mr.  Garnet 
Holme  can  drill  his  raw  recruits  into  presentable  and  effective  form  in  the  six 
weeks  of  each  semester  is  to  me  an  astounding  though  recurrent  miracle.  If 
with  each  new  performance  he  could  begin  where  he  left  off  in  the  former,  what 
things  might  he  not  accomplish?  Still,  although  we  cannot  equal  professional 
actors  in  discipline  and  maturity,  we  can  surpass  all  but  the  best  in  spirit  and 
literary  appreciation,  and  we  should  choose  our  plays  accordingly.  We  should 
choose  plays  academically  suitable,  plays  not  to  be  seen  elsewhere  or  not  to  be  seen 
so  effectively  done.  So  long  as  "L'Aiglon,"  "As  You  Like  It,"  "She  Stoops  to 
Conquer,"  hold  the  regular  stage,  we  should  not  attempt  them  unless  we  can  some- 
how make  our  productions  distinctive.  There  remains  for  us  a  sufficient 
list  of  new  and  old  plays  academic  in  appeal,  in  a  good  sense  of  that  mis- 
used word — that  is,  choice  both   in  the  literary  and  in  the  drematic  sense, 


MARY    STUART 


198 


DRAMATICS 

and  suited  to  a  University  audience.  'Twas  a  happy  stroke  that  hit  upon  "Csesar 
and  Cleopatra"  and  "Nero"  among  modern  plays,  and  upon  "The  Little  Clay 
Cart"  and  "Abraham  and  Isaac"  among  ancient.  The  fitness  of  Greek  tragedy  in 
English  hardly  needs  urging.  Last  May  the  writer  had  the  good  fortune  to 
witness  "CEdipus  Rex"  in  the  Teatro  Romano  at  Fiesole,  a  partly  ruined  Greek 
theatre,  not  unlike  our  own.  This  ancient  masterpiece  was  brilliantly  acted  in 
Italian  by  Gustavo  Salvini,  his  great  old  father  looking  on ;  yet  my  companion, 
who  had  once  seen  Mounet-Sully's  French  version,  "CEdipe  Roy,"  was  quite 
certain  that  our  own  "Oedipus,"  in  English,  May,  1910  (Mr.  von  Neumayer's 
coaching),  surpassed  both,  in  beauty  and  in  tragic  solemnity. 

Certain  plays,  though  academic  in  a  special  sense,  the  Greek  Theatre  forbids 
our  presenting.  The  play  which  presupposes  indoor  setting  and  which  derives  a 
considerable  part  of  its  significance  from  that  fact  we  cannot  give.  Only  one  or 
two  of  Moliere  are  even  possible,  only  one  or  two  of  Ibsen.  Nor  can  we  make  use 
of  plays  abounding  in  minute  subtleties  of  thought  or  of  action  or  of  facial  expres- 
sion. All  our  effects,  comic,  tragic,  poetic,  must  be  large.  For  one  thing,  we 
must  have  lines  which  will  carry  in  large  mass  to  the  auditors  back  of  the  dia- 
zoma,  and  these  lines  must  not  be  broken  or  the  voices  of  the  actors  will  drop  out 
of  hearing.  For,  acoustically,  the  Greek  Theatre  is  a  treacherous  place.  Perfect 
for  oratory  and  for  sustained  drama  of  a  certain  emotional  pitch,  it  is  a  trap  for 
rapid  dialogue,  quick  retorts  and  asides. 

It  goes  without  saying  that  all  our  productions  should  be  picturesque,  not  in 
the  sort  that  depends  on   stage   devices   and   mechanical   illusion  —  happily   the 


1913   TUNIOR  FARCE 


199 


DRAMATICS 

severity  of  the  great  stage-wall  denies  us  those  subterfuges— but  picturesque  in 
costume  and  in  grouping  of  crowds,  in  processions  and  ceremonials.  If  a  comedy 
is  chosen,  it  should  be  of  this  type.  "Caesar  and  Cleopatra,"  "The  Shoemaker's 
Holiday,"  not  only  abound  in  humor,  robust  and  apparent,  of  a  quality  to  carry 
to  the  remotest  corner  of  the  theatre,  but  they  allow  for  a  mise  en  scene  full  of 
color,  movement  and  appeal  to  the  visual  imagination.  The  one  tragi-comedy, 
"The  Winter's  Tale,"  and  the  tragedies  "Abraham  and  Isaac"  and  "Paolo  and 


PAOLO  AND  FRANCESCA 


Francesca"  bear  out  the  argument.  These,  too,  are  at  once  picturesque  and  long- 
range  dramas,  so  to  speak,  and  are  suited  to  the  dignity  and  the  capacities  of  the 
place. 

Why  not  go  further?  How  delightful  to  witness  a  double  bill  of  Plautus* 
Menaechmi,  followed  by  the  Shakespearean  redaction,  "Comedy  of  Errors"; 
or,  say,  the  "Frogs"  of  Aristophanes,  or  the  "Wasps" — in  English,  of  course! 
The  writer  has  for  eight  years  timidly  suggested  "Comus,"  set  to  Lawes'  music 
(the  original,  still  extant)  for  a  moonlight  evening  of  spring.     Surely  those  who 

200 


DRAMATICS 

remember  the  Ben  Greet  Players  in  "Midsummer  Night's  Dream"'  should  welcome 
"Comus  "  Even  Hauptmann's  "Sunken  Bell,"  mystical  as  it  is,  is  not  beyond 
the  powers  of  students  who  could  interpret  "Paolo  and  Francesca,"  nor  is  Maeter- 
linck's "Monna  Vanna."  Why  not  the  "Book  of  Job" — never  yet  attempted,  so 
far  as  the  writer  knows,  except  in  dramatic  reading,  yet  a  real  and  powerful  drama 
and  capable  of  a  wonderful  presentation? 

All  these  suggestions  presuppose  a  really  interested  student-body,  alive  to 
an  opportunity  such  as  perhaps  no  other  university  can  equal.  Alas!  at 
English  Club  plays — even  faculty  attendance,  for  that  matter — is  slight 
enough.  Our  average  audience  of  about  two  thousand,  though  it  would 
overflow  any  other  available  theatre,  is  not  large  enough  for  a  university 
community  like  ours.  Our  largest  audiences,  those  that  attended  the  "Little 
Clay  Cart"  and  "Nero,"  were  but  thinly  sown  with  undergraduates.  Of 
course,  there  is  always  the  theatre  manager's  dictum — "No  excuse  for  a  poor 
house" ;  if  the  audience  is  thin,  'tis  the  fault  of  the  play  or  of  the  advertising 
agent  But  that  is  a  rule  we  dare  not  adopt.  If  the  present  taste  does  not  sup- 
port plays  of  a  certain  hall-mark,  the  taste,  not  the  standard,  must  be  changed. 
Let  us  hope  that  we  have  got  beyond  the  point  where  an  editor  of  the  Occident 
could  say  of  the  English  Club  plays,  as  one  editor  actually  did  say  to  the  writer  a 
few  years  ago:  "Oh,  no,  I  don't  go  to  those  things;  if  I'm  to  spend  money  on  the 
theatre,  I  want  to  have  a  good  time;   I  ought  to  be  educated  for  nothing." 

Our  opportunity  is  unique ;  there  is  but  one  Greek  Theatre  in  America.  Is 
it  too  much  to  hope  that  its  influence  will  modify  our  dramatic  and  literary  taste 
a  little,  so  that  even  the  Junior  Farce  and  Senior  Extravaganza  shall  not  disdain 
to  be  finely  academic,  so  that  the  vaudeville  shall  not  have  everything  its 
own  way? 

Chauncey  Wetmore  Wells. 


201 


DRAMATICS 

'Mary  Stuart" 

HE  deep-toned  bells  were  tolling  from  the  Castle  of  Fotheringay 
with  the  last  farewells  of  Mary  Stuart.  She  stood  between  lines 
of  flaming  torches,  a  cross  of  consolation  held  high  above  her  head, 
erect  and  alone.  A  woman's  cry  was  heard  as  a  masked  red  figure, 
with  headsman's  ax,  stood  revealed  for  a  moment  at  the  portal. 
The  Scottish  Queen  mounted  the  steps,  hesitated  a  moment,  half  turned,  and, 
waving  to  her  followers,  crossed  the  threshold.  The  flaring  torches  followed. 
The  staee  was  cloaked  in  darkness. 


MARY   STUART 


202 


PAOLO  AND  FRANCESCA 


DRAMATICS 

In  this,  the  twelfth  production  of  the  English  Club,  it  is  only  fair  to  say  that 
art  triumphed  over  the  lines.  Miss  Leigh  Stafford  brought  grace,  dignity,  modu- 
lation and  fire  to  the  exacting  role  of  the  unfortunate  Mary.  The  sustained 
power  of  her  farewell  to  her  sorrowing  retainers  has  never  been  surpassed  on  an 
English  Club  stage.  Schiller's  Elizabeth  was  not  a  character  of  historical  fidelity. 
It  is  fortunate,  indeed,  that  such  an  accomplished  actress  as  Miss  Louise  Ramsdell 
was  cast  for  the  role.  E.  G.  Clewe  gave  a  subtle  portrayal  of  the  duplicity  of  Lord 
Leicester.  Other  rather  happy  characterizations  were  those  of  J.  H.  Catton,  R.  G. 
and  J.  W.  Rankin.  It  remained,  however,  for  R.  R.  Weber  to  furnish  the  sensa- 
tion of  the  production.  His  suicide  scene  could  scarcely  have  been  better  in  acting 
effect. 

The  success  of  "Mary  Stuart"  was  largely  due  to  the  flawless  stage  direction 
of  Garnet  Holme,  assisted  by  Professor  William  Popper.  The  production  was 
ably  managed  by  Roy  Silent. 

"Paola  and  Francesca" 

AOLO  and  Francesca,"  October  7,  191 1,  a  drama  living  up  to  the 
highest  traditions  established  by  the  English  Club,  takes  its  place 
in  the  ranks  of  past  productions.  Wrought  with  great  poetical 
beauty,  it  allowed  also  for  the  deepest  passion  and  sweep  of  senti- 
ment ;  and  a  cast  happily  lacking  in  the  blase  spirit  of  the  profes- 
sional carried  it  forward  to  success  by  the  force  of  enthusiasm.  The  splendid 
work  of  the  leads  is  treated  upon  more  fully  elsewhere.  Too  high  praise  cannot 
be  given  them.  The  others  who  deserve  special  mention  are  Roy  H.  Silent,  in  the 
portly  character  of  Corrado,  a  small  role,  but  a  distinct  hit ;  Maryly  Krusi,  as  the 
breezy  Nita;  John  W.  Rankin,  as  Pulci,  the  drug-seller,  a  piece  of  clever  charac- 
terization, and  Denman  McNear,  who  tossed  off  a  drinking  song  with  great  gusto. 
Garnet  Holme  coached  the  play,  the  success  of  which  is  all  the  praise  that  can  be 
given.  Professors  Wells  and  Popper  lent  much  helpful  advice,  while  the  Uni- 
versity Orchestra  furnished  the  music.  The  production  was  managed  by  Albert 
J.  Evers,  '11. 


204 


WHEN    JOHNNY    COMES    MARCHING    HOME 


I/^S' 

®S5 

m 

m 

DRAMATICS 

When  Johnny  Comes  Marching  Home1' 

HIS  bright  American  opera  was  presented  at  Idora  Park,  November 
3,  191 1,  In  selecting  "When  Johnny  Comes  Marching  Home"  for 
its  annual  production,  the  Treble  Clef  Society  showed  a  rare  genius. 
To  a  public  ear  filled  of  late  with  sentimental  "Marsovian"  ditties, 
it  was  a  most  pleasing  departure,  and  a  large  audience  showed 
delight  in  the  surprise.  The  performance  throughout  evidenced  a  snap  and  a  dash, 
the  singing  was  of  the  highest  order,  and  the  choruses  in  their  enthusiasm  typified 
the  spirit  of  the  entire  production.  As  for  the  stars,  there  were  many.  Miss 
Phyllis  Maguire,.  cast  in  the  difficult  role  of  Kate  Pemberton,  developed  a  colora- 
tura soprano  of  exquisite  quality  and  brilliancy  of  range.  As  Mrs.  Pemberton, 
Miss  McComb  brought  to  bear,  in  addition  to  beautiful  velvety  tones,  a  consider- 
able histrionic  ability,  while  a  catching  piquancy  and  humor  was  given  the  part  of 
Cordelia  Allen  by  Miss  Grace  Ewing.  As  for  the  men,  Henry  A.  Stern,  as 
"Johnny,"  with  his  full,  rich  baritone,  was  much  appreciated,  and  Ralph  High  in 
the  role  of  Jonathan  Phoenix,  was  rich  in  his  humorously  conceived  stage  business. 
Among  the  minor  roles,  Theodore  Haley  and  Ralph  McGee  were  quick  to  catch 
the  eye.  The  rest  of  the  cast  was  above  average.  To  the  excellent  coaching  of 
Fred  Carlyle  and  Paul  Steindorff  too  much  praise  cannot  be  given.  To  them  was 
due  the  well  ordered  ensemble.  The  production  was  ably  managed  by  Edwin 
S.  Walker,  '11. 


'WHEN    JOHNNY    COMES    MARCHING    HOME 


206 


DRAMATICS 

'The  Hop  King" — 1911  Senior  Extravaganza 

INETEEN-ELEVEN'S  extravaganza  was  dazzling  in  scenic  effects,, 
in  a  profusion  of  rich  and  whirling  colors,  while  its  tuneful  melo- 
dies were  hummed  for  more  than  a  passing  night.  It  was  the  work,, 
libretto  and  score,  of  Edwin  S.  Walker.  The  plot  was  placed  upon  the 
Campus  of  the  University  and  the  Island  of  Guampan,  H.  T.  It 
dealt,  in  a  fanciful  manner,  with  the  adventures  which  befel  upon  the  drinking  of 
a  magic  brew ;  how  strangely  assorted  couples  fell  in  love  upon  first  speech  with 
each  other,  and  how  a  broken  romance  was  healed. 

The  leads  were  taken  by  Miss  Mabel  Clinch  and  William  H.  Greenlaw,  in 
the  respective  parts  of  Mabel  Ketchem  and  Jack  Strong.  Miss  Clinch  delighted 
her  hearers  with  a  pure  lyric  soprano  voice.  Miss  Antoinette  Miklau,  in  her 
moonlight  song,  achieved  one  of  the  successes  of  the  evening,  as  did  Miss  Edna 
Higgins  in  a  clever  portrayal  of  Mrs.  Dyer  Ketchem.  Harold  Brayton  added 
excellent  acting  to  a  rich  voice,  cast  as  Father  John  of  Guampan.  Mention  must 
also  be  made  of  the  comic  hits  of  the  extravaganza  —  Irving  V.  Augur  and  Ralph 
B.  High,  in  the  parts  of  the  Hop  King  and  Lord  Algernon  Sidney. 


1911    SENIOR    EXTRAVAGANZA 


207 


DRAMATICS 

The    successful    production    was    trained    by    Frederick    Carlyle.      The    cast 
follows : 

Hans  Wagner,  the  Hop  King Irving  V.  Augur 

Jack  Strong,  a  "cow  college"  stude William  H.  Greenlaw 

Tom  Dexter,  his  friend Arthur  C.  Saxe 

Lord  Algernon  Sidney Ralph  B.  High 

Frank        f      «  f   Robert  H.  Moulton 

Phil  i     students  of  U.  C J      Robert  J.  Leebrick 

Bill  John  W.  Barnett 

Charlie  Noble  Hamilton 

The  Spirit  of  Days  Gone  by Harry  Maxwell 

Father  John  of  Guampan Harold  Brayton 

Tito,   the    Jap Delger    Trowbridge 

Mabel  Ketchem,  of  U.  C Mabel  Clinch 

Kitty  Sweet,  her  friend Antoinette  Miklau 

Helen  Ketchem,  her  sister Jennett   Miller 

Mrs.  I.  Dyer  Ketchem,  her  mother Edna  Higgins 

Students,  Basket  Ball  Girls,  London  Girls,  Baby  Doll  Girls, 
Yankee  Doodle  Girls,  etc. 


1911  senior  extravaganza 


208 


DRAMATICS 


"Peach" — -1913  Junior  Curtain-Raiser 

EACH,"  by  Roy  A.  Silent,  marked  a  considerable  departure  in 
curtain-raisers,  with  its  delicate  rather  than  broad  lines  of  humor. 
It  made  an  admirable  forerunner  to  the  play  to  follow.  The  story 
was  of  a  brig  race  between  the  middies  from  American  and  British 
men-of-w?r.  By  the  maneuvers  of  the  American  coach,  "Peach" 
Russell,  whose  love  affair  rested  upon  victory,  the  former  slipped  over  the  line 
first.  Mixed  up  in  this  was  an  English  lady  of  nobility  and  one  British  admiral, 
vast  in  his  appreciation  of  the  eternal  superiority  of  British  midshipmen.  Then, 
of  course,  there  was  the  girl,  Gwendolyn.  Lady  Herbert's  wayward  fancy  was 
well  portrayed  by  Miss  Enid  Watkins,  the  Gwendolyn  of  beauty  and  vivacity 
lightly  handled  by  Miss  Amy  Waite.  The  honors  of  the  production,  however, 
were  undoubtedly  divided  between  Lady  Herbert  and  the  Admiral.  James  B. 
Oliver  was  the  pig-head  to  perfection. 


CAST 

George  Russel,  U.  S.  N.  (known  as  "Peach"),  of  the  U.  S.  S.  "Okla- 
homa"    Henry  A.  Stern 

Sir    Christopher    Weslinghsm,    K.    C     M  .    commanding    British    China 

Squadron   James  B.  Oliver 

Blessington,  his  flag  lieutenant Robert  G.  Sproul 

Claudie  Wallowshire.  midshipman  on  the  "Glorious" John  J.  Beck 

Orderly Leslie  W.  Stahl 

Lady  Herbert Miss  Enid  Watkins 

Miss  Gwendolyn  de  Crespigney Miss  Amy  Waite 


211 


DRAMATICS 


1913    JUNIOR    CURTAIN-RAISER 


'Too  Much  Goat"— 1913  Junior  Farce 

ECLARED  the  best  in  a  college  generation,  the  191 3  farce,  Too 
Much  Goat,"  by  Victor  C.  Gaines,  was  staged  at  Ye  Liberty  Play- 
house, December  1,  191 1.  The  central  idea,  while  not  entirely 
novel,  pressed  the  laugh  to  the  limit.  About  it  were  woven  side 
complications,  new  and  most  refreshing.  The  gamut  of  humor 
was  run,  from  the  slap-stick  to  the  Shawian,  and  a  contagion  of  laughter  swept 
from  box  to  gallery.  Its  author  deserves  all  the  praise  that  can  be  meted  him.  An 
errant  goat  was  the  center  of  the  plot.  Sent  by  mistake  to  the  recorder,  smashing 
and  destroying  with  splendid  technique,  it  set  the  detectives  upon  the  trail  of  a 
care-free  fraternity.  The  young  hero  of  the  escapade  is  disguised  in  feminine 
habiliments,  getting  much  enjoyment  therefrom  in  his  role  of  confessor  to  the 
various  fair  ones — incidentally  to  an  English  lord,  who  succumbed  to  her  or  his 
charms,  but  alas !  there  comes  home  the  goat ;  and  the  brave  Nickolovitch,  who 
knows  not  the  reason,  is  arrested.  Somehow  the  matter  is  straightened  out ;  there 
are  flowers  and  more  flowers. 


212 


DRAMATICS 

The  farce  was  born  under  a  lucky  star,  for  it  also,  managed  to  escape  the 
deadly  anesthetic  of  makeshift  acting,  the  parts  of  Elizabeth,  Nickolovitch,  Crew- 
kern,  Wally  Douglas,  the  Freshman,  being  quickeners  to  the  dead  and  dying. 
Miss  Nachtrieb,  as  "Dots,"  carried  her  role  succesfully  with  a  grace  and  dramatic 
charm.  Miss  McComb,  the  Elizabeth  of  few  love  affairs  but  responding  nobly 
to  the  "higher  duty,"  twisted  the  audience,  as  well  as  Nickolovitch,  about  her  little 
finger ;  and  the  ardent,  the  formidable  Russian,  Forrest  Plant,  was  —  well,  an 
uproarious  success.  Miss  Brooks,  Miss  Ware  and  Miss  Cleveland  all  handled 
their  parts  with  a  delicate  touch.  As  lover-in-chief  in  the  plot,  John  Miller  put 
much  fire  and  action  into  his  work.  John  T.  Gribner,  Roy  A.  Silent,  Wade  Snook 
and  Victor  Collins  made  a  splendid  group  of  minor  comedy  stars.  In  the  role  of 
the  Freshman,  John  C.  Altman  assumed  the  difficult  lead.  He  was  typical  in  his 
dual  character  and  a  decided  hit.  The  production  was  coached  by  Garnet  Holme, 
with  all  his  comedy  talent  to  bear,  and  managed  by  John  R.  Simpson.  A  new 
scheme  was  tried  of  using  the  University  Orchestra  for  music,  and  from  the 
success,  one  stops  to  wonder  why  it  was  never  done  before.  And  so  another  farce 
is  docketed  and  higher  standards  set. 

CAST 

Robert  Short,  "Bobby,"  in  love  with  "Dots" John  J.  Miller 

Roland  Dills,  "Pinkie" John  T.  Gribner 

Wally  Douglas,  "Fat,"  in  love  with  "Puss" «. Roy  A.  Silent 

Lord  Crewkern C.  Wade  Snook 

Hamilton  Boggs,  Jr.,  Freshman John  C.  Altman 

Nicholas  Nickolovitch,  "Stude" Forrest  A.   Plant 

Donald  Harding,  of  the  Alpha  Kappa  Fraternity. ..  .Stanley  H.  McFadden 

Mr.  Mitchell,  Recorder Victor  F.  Collins 

Rudolph  Burns,  a  great  detective F.  Dorsey  Stephens 

Hamilton  Boggs,  a  good  sport Richard  D.  Jones 

Sergeant  of  the  Police Arlo  V.  Turner 

Miss  Dorothy  Mitchell,  "Dots" Miss   Barbara  Nachtrieb 

Grace  Allison    )  (     Miss  Rena  Brooks 

Helen  Tusstler  }  ColleSe  Women j     Miss  Ruth  Ware 

Rose  Bowers,  "Puss,"  a  Romantic  Stenographer Miss  Carolyn  Waite 

Elizabeth  Rossana  Crossett,  Pelican Miss  Alice  McComb 

Mrs.  Boggs,  a  loving  mother Miss  Louise  Cleveland 


213 


1913  JUNIOR  FARCE 


DRAMATICS 


"Captain  Jinks  of  the  Horse  Marines" 

On  the  evening  of  March  14, 
1912,  the  annual  Mask  and  Dag- 
ger comedy  gaily  stepped  across 
the  University  stage  into  the 
files  of  things  pleasantly  remem- 
bered. The  play,  Captain  Jinks, 
was  admirably  adapted  to  col- 
lege production  because  of  its 
exuberant  vitality  and  spark- 
ling fun.  Those  who  had  seen 
other  productions  of  the  FitcM 
comedy  and  other  Mine.  Tren- 
tonies,  quickly  forgot  them  in 
the  freshness  of  Miss  Xachtrieb's  airy  buoyancy  of  interpretation.  An  air  of 
decorous  refinement  was  breathed  into  the  play  by  the  presence  of  three 
gentlewomen,  as  characterized  by  Miss  Lurita  Stone,  Miss  Charlotte  Kett  and 
Miss  McComb. 

The  beau  of  the  town,  the  dashing  lady  killer,  was  done  to  the  queen's 
taste  by  Ernest  Clewe.  John  Rankin  played  upon  his  role  with  a  "Music 
Master's"  tenderness  and  latent  fire,  while  Gladstone  Wilson  donned  the  "new- 
sey's"  character  with  an  easy  familiarity.  Favorable  mention  must  be  made 
of  Roy  Silent  and  John  Gribner  as  companion  dandies,  and  of  J.  J.  Miller  as 
the  official  detective.  The  effective  coaching  of  Garnet  Holme  was  frequently 
visible.  Such  a  production  as  "Captain  Jinks"  renders  certain  another  large 
house  for  the  next  Mask  and  Dagger  comedy. 


WSM 

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cHa~'  *"     '  ai 

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Ai  \m 

1    ^H 

215 


gtfjleticg 


ATHLETICS 

Captain's  Statement 

Just  once  more  let  me  say  for  the  team  of  191 1  that  we  appreciated 
beyond  measure  the  support  given  us  so  loyally  on  all  sides.  With  just 
such,  with  the  same  man  at  the  helm,  we'll  win  and  keep  winning.  With 
deep  regret  some  of  us  have  to  step  out  of  the  active  game,  but  we  must 
always  remember  that  there  is  a  larger  field  open  to  us  to  help  California, 
and  we  will  do  it,  in  whatever  way  we  can. 

Amos  W.  Elliott. 

Coach's  Statement 

Another  football  season  has  gone  down  in  history,  this  time  as  a  victory 
for  California.  But  that  victory  should  not  be  taken  too  much  for  granted. 
It  was  only  obtained  after  a  long,  tiring  season  of  hard  work,  and  the  thanks 
of  every  Californian  should  be  given  the  various  factors  that  brought  it 
about.  It  is  impossible  to  overestimate  the  excellent  work  of  the  men  who 
wore  the  stripes  in  the  final  contest  with  Stanford.  Their  spirit,  their  loyalty 
and  fighting  determination  was  certainly  a  revelation. 

No  less  praise  must  surely  be  due  to  the  members  of  the  squad,  who 
did  much  of  the  disagreeable  work  throughout  the  season  with  no  hope  of 
making  the  Varsity.  Without  their  sacrifices  a  winning  team  would  be  an 
absolute  impossibility.  That  only  fifteen  men  participated  in  the  game  is 
sufficient  evidence  of  the  wonderful  condition  of  the  players.  Thank 
Charlie  Volz  for  that. 

Another  factor  which  had  a  great  deal  to  do  with  the  final  result  was 
the  harmonious  co-operation  between  the  men  and  the  coaches,  without 
which  no  success  could  be  hoped  for.  May  the  season  of  1912  be  as  en- 
couraging as  the  one  just  past. 

James  G.  Schaeffer. 


219 


ATHLETICS 


VARSITY  SQUAD 

Preliminary  Season 

LL  the  fears  of  the  Student  Body  for  a  California  defeat  in  191 1 
were  set  at  rest  on  August  21st,  when  twelve  veterans,  who  had 
already  felt  the  strain  and  thrill  of  one  or  more  intercollegiate  foot- 
ball games  returned  to  college.  In  less  than  a  week  the  largest 
squad  in  the  history  of  rugby  at  California  lined  up  on  California 
field  for  the  first  practice.  Here  the  season  was  opened  with  a  talk  by  "Jimmie" 
Schaeffer,  Coach. 

Nineteen  eleven  was  a  remarkable  season.  In  the  first  place,  it  marked  the 
final  triumph  of  intercollegiate  rugby  on  the  Pacific  Coast.  Those  who  had  clung 
tenaciously  to  the  old  game,  about  which  so  many  traditions  had  centered,  at  last 
admitted  the  superiority  of  the  present  style ;  for  there  is  in  rugby  an  aggressive- 
ness, an  openness  of  play,  a  freedom  of  passing,  and  a  quickness  of  action,  which 
in  the  old  game  was  impossible.  Team-work  is,  of  course,  the  very  keynote  of 
the  new  game,  and  this  element,  too,  did  its  great  part  to  bring  forth  effectively 
the  undoubted  advantages  of  rugby  over  the  American  style  as  now  played.  That 
it  has  come  to  stay  cannot  be  doubted. 

A  spirit  of  confidence,  almost  of  over-confidence,  pervaded  the  campus  dur- 
ing the  preliminary  contests — a  feeling  founded,  no  doubt,  on  the  absolute  faith 
we  had  learned  to  place  in  "Jimrme"  Schaeffer  and  on  the  personnel  of  the  team 
led  by  Amos  Elliott,  himself  a  mainstay.  The  places  left  vacant  by  such  men  as 
Dwiggins,  Jordan,  Harris  and  Ashley  were  filled,  however,  only  after  the  candi- 
dates for  them  had  been  tested  through  a  whole  season. 

The  teams  against  which  the  Varsity  was  pitted  this  year  were  strong.  To 
this  fact  is  attributable  the  efficiency  and  fight,  combined  with  clock-like  team- 

220 


ATHLETICS 


work,  which  our  fifteen  showed  on  Stanford  Field  November  nth.  The  Barbarian 
and  Olympic  clubs  especially  were  formidable  opponents,  and  had  it  not  been  for 
their  devotion  to  rugby  and  general  sportsmanlike  attitude,  the  English  game 
would  not  have  reached  its  present  high  position  on  the  Coast. 

Never  during  the  season  was  the  Varsity  defeated,  nor  was  a  man  seriously 
hurt.  To  the  work  of  Schaeffer,  Christie  and  Volz,  that  unbeatable  combination, 
such  a  showing  is  due. 

Scores  of  the  more  important  contests  follow : 

Varsity,  11;      Barbarians,  0  Varsity,  16; 

Varsity,    8;      Olympics,      0  Varsity,  14; 

Varsity,  31;      Barbarians,   3  Varsity,  18; 

Varsity,  60;      Olympics,  0 

Nevada  Game 

On  October  7th,  the  California  players  journeyed  to  Reno  to  engage  the 
Nevada  Varsity  in  the  annual  contest.  The  willing  spirit  of  that  team  always 
ensures  a  good  contest,  but  the  California  players  were  feeling  on  their  mettle 
that  day.  After  California  scored  29  points,  the  Nevada  players  made  such  a 
valiant  attempt  to  cross  the  Blue  and  Gold  line  that  the  victors  were  forced  to 
fight  like  mad  to  prevent  a  score.  The  return  game  was  to  be  played  in  Berkeley, 
but  by  an  unfortunate  circumstance  a  disagreement  took  place  and  the  contest  was 
canceled,  but  not  without  the  regret  of  the  whole  Student  Body. 


Olympics, 

Barbarians, 

Olympics, 


PARRISH   CARRYING   THE  BALL — FRESHMAN    GAME 


221 


ATHLETICS 


PAL7I.Y    DRIBBLING — VANCOUVER    GAME 

Vancouver  Games 

Two  weeks  before  the  big  game,  the  followers  of  rugby  were  given  an  oppor- 
tunity to  see  the  Varsity  in  fine  fighting  form,  which  surely  boded  well  for  the 
fortunes  of  the  Blue  and  Gold.  Against  a  team  picked  from  the  best  players  of 
both  Victoria  and  Vancouver,  Schaeffer's  men  had  little  trouble  in  carrying  off 
the  honors.  The  series  promised  to  be  interesting  for  many  reasons ;  it  would 
be  an  index  by  which  the  relative  merits  of  the  two  Varsities  could  be  judged ; 
it  proved  to  be  interesting  because  it  demonstrated  the  great  strides  which  rugby 
has  made  since  its  inception  five  years  ago. 

So  wonderful  had  been  the  improvement  that  the  Northerners  were  swept 
off  their  feet  by  the  aggressiveness  and  superior  condition  of  the  home  team.  The 
first  contest  resulted  in  a  21-0  score  in  a  game  marked  by  the  clever  work  of 
Morris  and  Stroud.  The  opponents  were  tired  after  the  hard  trip  from  the  north,, 
and  promised  better  things  for  the  next  game  on  Saturday,  October  28th ;  but 
they  reckoned  without  their  hosts.  Fighting  every  inch  of  the  way,  the  Canadians 
were  forced  to  take  the  defensive  early  in  the  game,  but  the  California  spirit  was 
not  to  be  denied,  and  at  the  end  the  men  from  the  north  had  to  submit  to  a  24-O' 
score,  but  they  gave  an  exhibition  of  cleverness  and  valor  which  was  good  to  see. 

223 


ATHLETICS 


C.   A.   PHLEGER 


K.     CARPENTER 


H.    II.   PHLE'.iER 


Freshman  Game 

Following  out  the  policy  of  preventing  Freshmen  from  taking  part  in  inter- 
collegiate contests,  Stanford  this  year  canceled  the  annual  Freshman  game. 
Nevertheless  Coach  Schaeffer  prepared  to  put  a  baby  team  in  the  field,  and  Mana- 
ger Farmer  made  arrangements  with  U.  S.  C.  Varsity  to  substitute  in  place  of 
the  Cardinal  players.  Because  of  the  size  of  the  191 5  Class,  much  was  expected 
of  the  entrants,  but  the  squad  at  first  was  a  disappointment  to  both  coaches  and 
bleachers.  Time  after  time  the  team  met  defeat  at  the  hands  of  inexperienced  high 
school  players.  Whether  it  was  lack  of  that  spirit  which  is  born  of  enthusiasm, 
or  sheer  lack  of  ability,  no  one  seemed  to  know. 

The  fifteen  players  clad  in  the  blue  of  their  Alma  Mater  who  came  running 
out  on  California  Field  to  uphold  the  honor  of  the  class  against  a  whole  university 
had  a  look  of  determination  on  their  faces  which  was  a  good  omen.  From  the 
beginning  of  the  contest  to  the  end  the  bleachers  were  on  their  feet  continually 
cheering  the  aggressive  tactics  of  the  blue-jerseyed  forwards  and  the  well-timed 
passing  and  quick  dodging  of  the  well-trained  backs.  The  U.  S.  C.  Varsity  was 
an  unknown  quantity,  but  not  once  were  the  Southern  players  able  to  start  a  rush 
which  would  bring  the  play  in  the  danger  zone.  Captain  Bogardus  at  full-back 
led  the  attack,  and  before  the  whistle  sounded,  ending  the  game,  five  trys  were 
chalked  up  in  favor  of  the  Freshmen,  and  the  stone-wall  defense  of  California 
prevented  the  opposition  from  once  crossing  the  Blue  and  Gold  line.  The  game 
ended  with  the  score  standing,  California,  15;   U.  S.  C,  o. 


224 


ATHLETICS 


Following  the  mediocre  showing  which  the  same  team  made  throughout  the 
season,  the  excellent  account  which  the  Freshmen  gave  of  themselves  was  not 
short  of  marvelous  and  was  a  standing  testimonial  to  the  spirit  of  the  class  and 
the  ability  of  the  coaches  and  trainers  who  had  the  handling  of  the  aspirants. 


California 
Bogardus    (Captain). 

Parrish  

Peddycord  

Dawson  


HARDY  .  HANSEN 

The  Line-up 

U.  S.  C. 

Fullback Wright 

.Three-quarters Wallace 

.  Three-quarters Huston 

Three-quarters Rubio 


Fenstermacher    Five-eighths Foss 

Driver    Five-eighths Milliken 

Canfield  Halfback Alber 

Chapman   Forward Keller 

McKim    Forward (Huntington)   Livernash 

Newell    Forward Harrell 

Crane    Forward Adamson 

Miller  Forward (Cummins)   Oleson 

Hoskins    Forward Tesch 

Hunt    (Doyle) Forward Swartz 

Holden    Forward (  Maddock)  Kaprillan 

225 


ATHLETICS 


The  Big  Game 

NT  A  few  brief  moments  all  the  ignominy  of  the  defeats  of  the  past, 
all  the  hopes  crushed  and  anticipations  unrealized,  were  finally  and 
effectually  banished  when  for  the  third  time  in  as  many  years  the 
Blue  and  Gold  of  California  waved  in  triumph  over  the  Cardinal 
of  Stanford.  It  was  a  glorious  game,  played  under  the  most  favor- 
able weather  conditions  on  the  beautiful  green  sward  of  Stanford  Field.     A  slight 


ATHLETICS 


breeze  was  blowing  up  the  enclosure,  catching  the  banners  of  the  supporters  of 
the  two  varsities,  mingling  the  Blue  and  Gold  and  the  Cardinal  in  a  perfect  sea 
of  brilliant  coloring.  Never  was  there  such  a  crowd  gathered  on  that  field  as 
journeyed  to  Palo  Alto  on  November  nth. 

Fully  an  hour  before  the  starting  whistle  sounded,  the  two  rooting  sections 
were  filled  to  overflowing  and  hurled  across  the  field  the  deafening  challenges 
which  always  mark  the  war  of  sound  which  is  as  a  preliminary  to  the  main  event. 
All  the  enthusiasm  pent  up  for  months  was  now  given  loose  rein,  and  the  deafen- 
ing roar  of  all  the  rooters  floated  through  the  air,  but  above  it  all,  clear  and  loud, 
could  be  heard  the  mighty  "Oski."  All  the  shouting  before  was  as  nothing  when 
compared  to  the  roar  which  greeted  the  entrance  of  the  two  Varsities ;  on  one  side 
the  red  confetti  filled  the  air  and  settling  disclosed  the  great  white  "S,"  which  has 
cheered  so  many  Stanford  teams  on  to  victory  in  the  past.  On  the  other  side, 
after  the  team  had  trotted  from  the  training  house,  as  the  first  big  "Oski"  rent  the 
air,  a  great  mass  of  Blue  and  Gold  streamers  were  thrown  aloft,  and  as  they  set- 
tled was  seen  the  form  of  a  California  bear  standing  out  in  blue  against  a  white 
background  and  a  golden  "C"  in  the  middle. 

And  then  the  game  was  on.  As  soon  as  the  Stanford  man  put  his  boot  to 
the  ball,  the  California  rooters  started  that  old  battle  song,  "Boola,"  and  the  whole 
arena  seemed  to  take  up  the  refrain  as  the  blue-jerseyed  forwards,  led  by  Pauly, 
rushed  the  ball  to  mid-field.  In  the  numerous  line-outs  which  followed,  the  oppos- 
ing forces  fought  like  mad.  After  a  few  moments  of  whirlwind  playing,  a  Cali- 
fornia score  seemed  inevitable,  but  with  a  "do-or-die"  spirit  the  Cardinal  always 


228 


ATHLETICS 

managed  to  worm  out  of  danger.  The  California  forwards  seemed  to  get  the 
ball  on  the  throw-in,  even  from  the  mighty  Dole,  and  the  "hookers"  seemed  to 
have  little  trouble  in  securing  from  the  cardinal  front-rankers  in  the  scrum, 
but  the  winning  pace  which  admits  no  opposition  had  not  as  yet  been  reached. 

But  the  California  spirit  was  not  to  be  denied  for  long,  for  the  players  tight- 
ened their  belts,  and,  amid  the  shouting  of  the  bleachers,  Captain  Elliott  and 
Stroud  brought  the  spectators  to  their  feet  as  they  carried  the  ball  to  the  very 
shadows  of  the  Stanford  goal  posts.  Only  fifteen  yards  remained.  The  strain 
was  intense.  Unconsciously  the  bleachers  struck  up  the  refrain  of  "Boola,"  which 
trailed  off  in  a  mighty  shout  as  Morris  scooped  the  ball  which  came  bounding 
out  of  the  scrum,  and,  as  Harrigan  bore  down,  passed  the  sphere  to  Elliott  who 
plunged  through  the  defense.  Then  out  of  the  ruck  the  ball  was  passed  to  Evans, 
who  handily  grounded  safely  in  the  corner  of  the  field.  Stroud  failed  to  convert 
from  this  difficult  angle.  The  score  stood  thus  ten  minutes  after  the  game 
started. 

This  only  served  to  make  the  Stanford  team  fight  the  harder,  and  after  a 
few  minutes  of  the  fiercest  kind  of  playing,  the  score  was  tied.  Following  the 
drop-out,  the  Cardinal  forwards  following  up  beautifully  took  the  play  in  the 
danger  zone,  but  a  free  kick  allowed  Peart  to  boot  out  of  danger.  The  respite 
was  only  momentary,  for  Harrigan  put  his  boot  to  the  ball  for  a  well-placed 
kick  to  the  corner  flag.  Try  as  they  could  the  California  players  were  helpless 
before  the  well-timed  attack  of  the  Stanford  breakaways,  and  when  the  referee's 


COMING  OUT  OF  THE  RUCK 


229 


ATHLETICS 


PEART    KICKING   OUT    OF   DANGER 


whistle  sounded,  telling  of  the  try,  their  supporters  went  wild  with  enthusiasm. 
It  was  well  they  took  this  opportunity  to  give  vent  to  their  spirit.  This  was  the 
only  time  that  the  Cardinal  crossed  the  Blue  and  Gold  line.  Brown  failed  to  con- 
vert.    Score  3-3. 

This  seemed  to  give  the  Cardinal  a  new  lease  on  life,  for  this  last  score  was 
a  signal  for  the  hardest  play  of  the  game.  Superior  kicking  gave  the  opposition 
a  distinct  advantage,  and  Kern  by  some  clever  dodging  brought  the  play  to  the 
five-yard  line.  The  California  supporters  took  a  deep  breath  of  relief  as  the 
theatre  of  action  moved  down  the  field.  It  was  the  next  play  that  electrified  the 
spectators.  A  passing  bout,  a  long  kick  by  Allen,  which  fell  in  the  arms  of  Cap. 
Phleger,  netted  sixty  yards.  As  soon  as  the  scrum  was  formed,  the  ball  came 
flying  out  to  Amos  Elliott,  who  was  equal  to  the  occasion,  for  he  circled  the 
entire  pack  before  he  was  downed  directly  behind  the  posts.  From  now  on, 
slowly  but  surely,  the  veteran  team  started  such  a  fast  pace  that  it  brooked  no 
delays.  The  half  ended  with  the  ball  in  the  middle  of  the  field  and  the  score  board 
reading,  California,  8;    Stanford,  3. 

The  second  half  was  like  the  first,  and  was  an  uphill  fight  from  the  start. 
Knowing  well  that  the  combination  of  the  well-trained  team  of  veterans  from 
across  the  Bay  and  the  unconquerable  spirit  of  the  winners  were  too  much  for 
them,  the  Cardinal  fought  on,  asking  no  quarter  and  giving  none.  But  the  play 
had  hardly  been  resumed  before  the  husky  forwards  led  by  Swartz  and  Pauly 
had  taken  the  battle  well  in  the  enemy's  territory,  and  before  the  tide  could  be 

231 


1 

1 

fc#*» 

• 

* 

n 

T# 

*      '     . 

r '  5 

? 

.«►  «i» 

1 

.<*.'- 

^  •« 

i 

U$ 


4~  *' 


23 


»   :•     t* 


CAPTAIN  ELLIOTT  TAKING  THE  B.S 


RUSH — WATTS   INTERFERING 


ATHLETICS 

turned,  the  ball  was  pushed  over  the  line,  with  Pauly  securely  in  possession. 
Captain  Elliott  was  entrusted  with  the  kicking,  but  the  angle  was  too  difficult. 
Score,  1 1-3.  The  crowd  had  hardly  settled  again  when  they  were  on  their  feet, 
cheering  as  Pauly  slid  through  from  a  five-yard  scrum.  Amid  the  silence  of  the 
Stanford  bleachers,  Amos  converted  handily,  making  the  score  16-3. 

Following  the  kick-off,  Brown  carried  off  the  honors  in  a  punting  duel,  but 
by  dint  of  hard,  fast  work,  the  play  centered  around  the  twenty-five  yard  line. 
It  was  then  up  to  Evans  to  carry  the  pigskin  across  the  line.  Dashing  down  the 
field,  the  fleet  little  wing  picked  the  ball  from  the  loose,  and  before  the  defence 
could  interfere,  he  dashed  through  and  planted  the  ball  on  the  turf  behind  the  bars. 
Stroud  converted,  making  the  final  score  read  21-3. 

Even  then  the  enthusiasm-mad  rooters  began  to  pour  down  from  the  bleachers 
to  make  ready  for  the  serpentine,  which  was  a  most  fitting  ending  to  a  great  game 
and  a  great  day. 

It  is  difficult  to  pick  the  "stars,"  for  every  man  on  the  Varsity  played  with 
the  grim  determination  and  coolness  of  a  tried  veteran.  This  game  marked  the 
passing  of  many  of  the  players  whose  names  have  become  by-words  on  the 
campus.  It  is  most  fitting  that  their  last  game  should  have  been  a  victory.  No 
matter  what  happens  in  the  future  or  what  is  in  store  for  the  fortunes  of  Cali- 
fornia, the  memory  of  the  Varsity  of  191 1,  led  by  Amos  Elliott,  coached  by 
Schaeffer  and  Cerf,  and  trained  by  Volz,  will  ever  be  fresh. 

Not  a  substitute  was  used.     Following  is  the  way  the  teams  lined  up : 


CALIFORNIA  S   TRY 


234 


ATHLETICS 
California 

Carpenter Forward 

H.  H.  Phleger Forward 

C.  A.  Phleger Forward ...... 

Hardy    Forward 

Hansen  Forward 

Pauly    Forward 

King  Forward 


Stanford 

. .    Woodcock 
. . . .    Sanborn 

Smith 

. . .   Partridge 

Dole 

Frank 

. . .     Schaupp 


Swartz    

Morris   

Elliott   (Captain). 


. .  Forward Gard 

. .  Halfback ( Captain)    Erb 

.Five-eighths Harrigan 


Stroud   Five-eighths 

Allen     Center  Three-quarters . 

Watts Three-quarters.  .  . . 

Evans    Three-quarters 


Peart 


Noble 

Kern 

Geissler 

Risling 

.  Fullback Brown 


CALIFORNIA  S   FIFTEEN    ARRIVES 
THE  BEAR 


236 


ATHLETICS 


THE   STEAMER 


CALIFORNIA  S   TEAM 


The  Cooper-Keith  trophy,  symbolic  of  the  rugby  supremacy  on  the  Pacific 
Coast,  was  returned  to  its  original  home  in  Canada,  when  California  Varsity  was 
defeated  by  the  Victorian  players  during  the  Christmas  vacation.  The  initial 
contest,  played  on  Christmas  Day  on  a  field  sloppy  from  the  recent  rains,  resulted 
in  a  o  to  o  tie.  While  the  type  of  rugby  seen  in  this  game  was  not  brilliant,  the 
crowd  enjoyed  the  struggle  because  of  the  grim  determination  and  fight  displayed 
by  both  teams. 

In  the  second  game,  played  three  days  later,  the  blue-jerseyed  athletes  were 
swamped  by  the  great  number  of  free  kicks  awarded  Victoria,  which  finally 
resulted  in  two  goals  and  six  points,  against  the  one  try  not  connected  which  was 
secured  by  California.  The  last  and  deciding  game  was  a  repetition  of  those 
gone  before.  The  muddy  field  and  slippery  ball  made  it  impossible  for  the  Blue 
and  Gold  backs  to  get  in  their  good  kicks,  and  one  of  the  British  Columbia  players, 
Gillispy.  gave  a  wonderful  exhibition  of  kicking,  twice  dropping  the  pigskin 
over  the  goal  for  points  sufficient  to  win. 

The  following  men  made  the  trys :  Swartz,  Pauly,  Carpenter,  Peart,  Stroud, 
Evans,  Crane,  Hunt,  Holden,  Miller,  Malatista,  Hollister,  J.  R.  Allen,  McMahon, 
Campbell,  Mini,  W.  N.  Hale,  Bogardus  and  Dolan.  The  team  was  accompanied  by 
Coach  Schaeffer,  Trainer  Volz  and  Manager  Farmer. 


. "'  -•    ;*:-a-"'  ^wfti  .--" "  • 

THE    SERPENTINE 


237 


Daseboll 


Conklin,    pitcher 
Allen,    third   base    (Capt.) 

Coane,    left    field 


Chapman,   pitcher 


240 


Rubke    at    bat 
Goodwin    fouling 


Dodson,    first    b^se 

Forker,    pitcher 

Ford,    center    field 
Stoner,    catcher 


ATHLETICS 


California  vs.  Japanese  Universities — 1911 

Two  baseball  teams  from  Japanese  universities  visited  the  Campus 
after  the  intercollegiate  series  and  created  a  great  deal  of  interest.  The 
Japanese  players  showed  an  excellent  knowledge  of  the  game,  and  good 
judgment  in  their  plays.  The  results  of  the  games  were  as  follows:  Uni- 
versity of  Keio  3,  California  3;   University  of  Waseda  4,  California  1. 


Northern  Trip  Baseball— 1911 

By  defeating  the  University  of  Washington  baseball  team,  the  California 
players  won  the  intercollegiate  championship  of  the  Pacific  Coast.  In  all 
seven  games  were  played  while  in  the  north,  five  of  which  were  California 
victories,  the  other  two  being  very  close. 

The  first  game  was  with  the  Washington  team,  on  May  23rd,  and  re- 
sulted in  a  score  of  3  to  2  in  favor  of  California.  The  second  game  proved 
to  be  the  most  interesting  of  the  series,  and  resulted  in  a  California  victory 
by  7  to  2,  but  this  hardly  tells  the  story  as  the  game  was  a  pitching  duel 
between  Forker  of  California  and  Johnson  of  Washington.  In  the  tenth  frame 
California  scored  five  tallies,  thereby  winning  the  Coast  championship.  The  third 
game  was  won  by  Washington  with  a  score  of  6  to  4. 

The  first  game  with  Oregon  resulted  in  a  California  defeat,  with  a  score 
of  9  to  o,  the  home  team  not  being  in  the  best  condition.  California  came 
back  at  Oregon  in  the  second  game,  winning  with  a  score  of  4  to  3.  The  re- 
sults of  the  other  games  played  on  the  northern  trip  were  as  follows :  Tacoma 
High  School  3,  California  8 ;  Multnomah  Athletic  Club  o,  California  2. 

Forker,  Haskell  and  Chapman  made  up  the  pitching  staff  of  the  team, 
and  Stoner  caught  throughout  the  series.  The  rest  of  the  men  who  made  the 
trip  were:  Greenlaw  (Capt.),  first  base;  Goodwin,  second  base;  Allen,  third 
base ;  Gay,  Coane,  Salisbury  and  Ford  in  the  field.  Schaeffer,  coach,  and 
^Corlett,  manager. 

241 


OBEAR   STOPPING    WILD   THROW — RUBKE   SAFE 


ATHLETICS 

Freshmen  Lose  at  Baseball 

N  innovation  was  introduced  this  year  in  the  way  of  an  inter- 
collegiate Freshmen  baseball  contest.  Judging  from  the  brand 
of  ball  played  and  the  interest  which  was  aroused,  the  experi- 
ment was  entirely  successful.  On  March  23rd  the  1915  team 
crossed  bats  with  the  University  of  Southern  California,  and 
while  the  babies  were  on  the  short  end  of  a  5  to  3  score,  the  game  was  well 
worth  seeing,  and  clearly  demonstrated  that  Freshmen  took  to  the  new 
sport  with  a  will. 

Coach  Barieau  had  the  Freshmen  squad  in  hand,  and  by  having  a  great 
number  of  preliminary  games  throughout  the  season,  turned  out  a  steady, 
fast  team  of  ball  players.  Abbott  held  the  visitors  down  for  six  innings 
but  in  the  seventh  frame  they  solved  his  delivery  and  were  swinging  on  his 
offerings  freely  when  replaced  by  Sweet.  For  the  first  few  minutes  he 
served  little  better,  for  the  first  man  up  hit  for  two  bases,  driving  in  two 
runs. 

The  Freshmen  came  early  and  scored  their  runs  in  the  fourth  inning. 
With  two  on  Schon  hit  for  three  bases  and  scored  both  Holden  and  Shep- 
herd. Schon  himself  came  in  on  a  miscue  by  the  third  baseman.  Haskell 
steadied  down  after  this  and,  try  as  they  would,  the  Freshmen  could  not  break 
through  the  strong  defense.  Holden,  the  first  year  captain,  played  an  ex- 
cellent game  at  first  base.  The  score  follows : 
SOUTHERN  CALIFORNIA 

AB.       R.      BH.     PO.      A.       E. 

Foss,   2b 5  0  0  3  1  0 

Wright,    ss 3  1  0  0  4  0 

Bridwell,    rf 1  2  1  0  0  0 

Lynch,    rf 2  0  0  1  0  0 

Millikan,    cf 4  1  3  2  0  0 

O'Connor,   c 4  0  1  6  1  0 

Bryan,   lb 4  0  0  9  0  0 

Spencer,    3b 4  0  0  3  0  2 

Rives,    If 4  1  2  2  0  0 

Haskell,   p 4  0  2  1  3  0 


FRESHMEN 

AB.      R.     BH.    PO.  A. 

4  1 

3  0 

0  1 

8  0 

2  1 

1  2 
7  0 

2  0 
0  1 
0  0 


Hunt,   cf 5  0  1 

Rice,    rf 4  0  0 

Young,  3b 4  0  0 

Holden,    lb 4  1  1 

Sherrard,    ss 4  1  1 

Schon,    2b 3  1  2 

Glenny,    c 4  0  0 

Abbott,    p 2  0  0 

Sweet,    p 1  0  0 

Robinson,   If 3  0  0 


Total 35      5      9    27      9      2 

123456789 

Runs    0    0    0    0    0    3    0     1     1—5 

Hits    0    0    2     1     0    1     1     3     1—9 


Total 34      3      5    27      6      3 

123456789 

Runs    0    0    0    3    0    0    0    0    0—3 

Hits    0    0    0    3    0    0    0     1     1—5 


Summary:  Struck  out — By  Haskell,  5;  by  Abbott,  5;  by  Sweet,  3.  Hit  by  pitcher — 
Bridwell,  Robinson,  Abbott.  Three-base  hit,  Rives.  Two-base  hit,  Hunt.  Double  play — 
Sherrard  to  Schon  to  Holden;   Foss  to  Bryan.  Time  of  game — 2  hours.     Umpire — Nealon. 


243 


Baseball 


ATHLETICS 


PRELIMINARY  SEASON 


ITH  Jimmie  Schaeffer  on  the  coaching  line  and  seven  veterans 
returned  to  college,  the  hopes  of  the  California  rooters  for  a 
successful  conclusion  of  the  1912  baseball  season  seemed  very 
bright.  From  the  first  game  until  the  final  victory  over  Stan- 
ford on  California  Field,  the  California  players  worked  with 
greater  precision  and  finish  than  they  had  ever  before  exhibited.  A  long 
season  of  ideal  weather  conditions  and  a  good  schedule  of  preliminary  games, 
with  strong  aggregations  about  the  bay,  all  tended  to  develop  the  Varsity  to  its 
strongest  efficiency. 

For  the  first  time  in  years  California  succeeded  in  besting  St.  Mary's  on 
the  diamond,  and  the  fact  that  the  collegians  were  defeated  by  a  six  to  five 
score  is  evidence  of  the  merits  of  Schaeffer's  charges.  During  the  season 
twenty-four  games  were  played,  fourteen  of  which  resulted  in  victories.  This 
is  an  exceptional  record  considering  the  strength  of  the  teams  which  formed 
the  opposition.      Following  is  a  record  of  games  for  the  season  : 


California 9-11 Ireland 

California 3-  1 Zamlock 

California 3-  2 All  Stars 

California 1-0 Zamlock 

California 4-18. ..  .Santa   Clara 

California 8-  6 Zamlock 

California 5-  3 Marines 

California 3-  5 Zamlock 

California 0-11 Olympic 

California 1-2 Zamlock 

California 3-  1 All  Stars 

California 6-  5 St.    Mary's 


California 3-  2 Ireland 

California 2-  0 Zamlock 

California 3-4 Ireland 

California 2-  0 Scrub  Nine 

California 2-0 Ireland 

California 2-  3.... Oak.  P.  C.  L. 

California 12-  4 Zamlock 

California 3-  9 Ireland 

California 3-  6 Olympic 

California 7-8 U.  S.  C. 

California 3-  2 U.  S.  C. 

Won  14  games ;  lost  10  games. 


THE  FIRST  GAME 

Stanford's  new  baseball  diamond  was  duly  christened  on  March  30th, 
when  California  Varsity  won  by  a  score  of  eight  to  five,  in  a  game  which, 
while  replete  with  errors,  was  nevertheless  made  exciting  by  heavy  hitting  and 
a  valiant  rally  by  the  Cardinal  players  in  the  latter  stages  of  the  contest.  The 
Blue  and  Gold  started  their  scoring  early,  and  by  the  end  of  the  third  inning 
had  a  lead  of  six  runs,  three  scored  in  the  second  and  three  again  in  the  third, 
due  to  good  batting  and  Stanford's  errors. 

Forker  was  in  the  box  for  California,  and  from  the  beginning  had  the  op- 
position well  in  hand.  Six  hits,  which  netted  Stanford  five  runs,  were  all  that 
could  be  secured  from  his  delivery.  The  Cardinal  started  the  seventh  inning 
off  with  a  will,  and  two  hits,  coupled  with  some  careless  playing  by  Cali- 


244 


ATHLETICS 

fornia,  netted  them  two  runs.      They  kept  up  the  same  rally  in  the  eighth 
inning  and  this  time  managed  to  put  across  three  more  tallies.      For  a  while 
it  looked  as  if  the  Blue  and  Gold  were  to  have  victory  snatched  from  them, 
but  the  team  steadied  down  and  stopped  all  scoring. 
Following  is  the  story  of  the  game  : 

CALIFORNIA  STANFORD 

_     .  .  AB-       R-     BH-     PO.      A.       E.  AB.       R.     BH.     PO.      A.       E. 

Rubke,  ss 4      2      13      3      1  Argabrite,  If 5      0      0      0      0      0 

Coane,   If 5       1       2      3      0       1  Obear,    lb 5      0      2     11       0      0 

Goodwin,   2b 3       0       1       4      3      0  Terry,   ss 4      1       0      3      3      0 

Allen,  3b 5      2      2       10       1  Cass,  2b 3       10       14      1 

Dodson,    lb 3       1       2     10      0       1  Beeger   rf 3      2      1       2      0      0 

Shepherd,   rf 4       1       1       0      0      0  Gault,   3b 4      0      0      0      3      0 

Forker,  p 3      0      0      0      3      0  Noble,  cf 3       113      0      2 

Ford,  cf 4      0      0      0      0      0  Schofield,  c 4      0      2      7      2      0 

Stoner,  c 2       10      5      0      0  Couch,  p 0      0      0      0      0      1 

—    —    —    —    —    —  Howe,  p 4      0      0      0      0      2 

Total  33      89*26      94  ______ 

123456789  Total  35      5      6    27     12      6 

California    ...03301001     0—8  123456789 

Base  hits.... 0    2     3    0     110     2    0—9  Stanford    0    0    0    0    0    0    2    3    0—5 

Base  hits....  1     10    0    0    12     1     0—6 

*Beeger  out,  hit  by  batted  ball. 

Summary:  Three-base  hit — Coane.  Two-base-hits — Allen,  Goodwin,  Dodson.  First  base 
on  called  balls — Off  Forker,  4;  off  Couch,  1;  off  Howe,  5.  Struck  out — By  Forker,  4;  by 
Couch,  2;  by  Howe,  5.  Left  on  bases — California,  8;  Stanford,  6.  Stolen  bases — Stoner 
(2),  Rubke  (2),  Shepherd  (2),  Obear,  Terry,  Cass.  Balk — Howe.  Wild  pitch,  Forker. 
Passed  ball — Stoner.     Time  of  game — 1  hour  and  55  minutes.     Umpire — Brady. 

*Childs  batted  for  Henshaw  in  ninth. 

FINAL  GAME— 3-1 

One  week  later  Stanford  journeyed  to  California  to  get  revenge,  but 
again  the  gods  were  kind,  and  in  a  hair-raising  contest,  California  won  by  the 
close  score  of  three  to  one.  From  every  standpoint  the  game  was  better  than 
that  before;  the  fielding  of  both  teams  was  spectacular  and  the  hitting  came 
just  at  the  time  it  meant  most.  Shepherd,  who  had  carried  himself  so  well 
in  the  game  before,  sprained  his  ankle,  necessitating  Forker  taking  his  place 
in  right  field.  Conklin  was  sent  in  and  for  six  innings  held  the  opposition 
at  bay.  In  the  third  inning,  while  fielding  a  bunt,  he  was  spiked  in  the  face 
by  the  runner,  which  caused  him  to  weaken  a  bit.  Chapman  was  then  put 
in  the  box,  and  held  the  opposing  batters  to  a  single  hit. 

Captain  Allen  figured  in  starting  the  game  to  victory.  With  two  down 
and  Goodwin  at  third,  Allen  brought  the  first  run  across  by  a  grounder  to 
third.  Stoner's  playing  was  the  sensation  of  the  day.  Not  content  with  poling 
out  two  clean  hits,  he  brought  the  crowd  to  its  feet  by  making  two  beautiful  put 
outs  at  home  plate.  If  he  had  failed  in  either  case  the  tale  might  have  been 
different. 

246 


ATHLETICS 


The    following   is   the    score : 


STANFORD 

AB.       R.     BH.     PO. 
0 
1 
9 


CALIFORNIA 


Terry,  ss 4  1  1 

Gault,  3b 4  0  1 

Obear,  ib 3  0  0 

Beeger,   rf 4  0  0 

Cass,  2b 3  0  0 

Hahn,   cf 3  0  1 

Argabrite,  If 4  0  1 

*Henshaw,  c 3  0  2 

Howe,   p 3  0  0 

Chikls   1  0  0 


A. 

4 
0 
0 

0      0 
2      1 


Rubke,    ss 4 

Coane,   If 4 

Goodwin,  2b 4 

Allen,  3b 4 

Dodson,    lb 4 

Forker,  rf 3 

Stoner,  c 3 

Conklin,  p 3 

*Chapman,  p 0 

Ford,  cf 3 


R.     BH.    PO. 


1  1 

2  4 
1  2 
0  1 

0  12 

1  3 


Total    32      1      6    24      8      3 

123456789 

Stanford    0    0    0    0    0     10    0    0—1 

Base  hits.... 0    0    10    12    2    0    0—6 


Total    32      3      8    27     16      2 

123456789 
1  1  '0  0  0  1  0  0  x— 3 
3  10  1110  x— 8 


California 
Base  hits. 


1 


*Chapman  succeeds  Conklin  in  first  of  seventh. 

Summary:  Three-base  hits — Goodwin.  Two-base  hits — Argabrite,  Stoner.  Stolen  bases — 
Coane,  Forker  (2),  Obear.  First  base  on  called  balls — Off  Chapman,  2.  Struck  out — By 
Conklin,  2;  Howe,  7.  Hit  by  pitcher — Cass,  Forker.  Double  plays — Allen  to  Dodson.  Time 
of  game — 2  hours,  5  minutes.      Umpire — "King"   Brady. 


247 


250 


Wood,   sprinter 
Allen,  broad  jumper 
Arnott,  miler 


Wood,   miler 


Meyer,  relay 
Hill,  high  jumper 
Todd,  quarter  miler 


ATHLETICS 


Pacific  Coast  Interscholastic 

Palo  Alto  High  School,  191 1,  won  a  decisive  victory  in  the  first  annual 
Pacific  Coast  Interscholastic  Meet,  held  on  the  California  oval,  in  April,  iqii, 
with  a  total  of  22  points.  The  nearest  competitors  could  only  score  eleven  points. 
Three  high  schools  tied  for  second — Oakland,  Orange  Union  and  Woodland — 
while  Berkeley  came  third  with  10  points. 

The  meet  was  marked  by  close  races  and  splendid  performances  on  the 
part  of  several  of  the  individual  participants.  Kelly  and  Templeton  for 
Orange  and  Palo  Alto,  respectively,  shared  the  honors  for  individual  point 
winning,  each  capturing  n  for  his  team. 

The  visit  of  the  high  school  men  was  marked  by  two  monster  enter- 
tainments, a  vaudeville  and  circus.  The 
vaudeville  was  given  by  the  Glee  Club 
and  was  a  great  success,  while  the  circus 
the  following  night,  the  first  of  its  kind 
ever  held  on  the  Campus,  was  novel,  and 
did  much  to  make  the  meet  such  an  un- 
qualified success. 


251 


ATHLETICS 

Pacific  Coast  Conference 

The  second  annual  Pacific  Coast  Conference  Meet,  held  last  April,  was 
a  complete  California  victory.  The  Cardinal  athletes  pressed  closest  on  the 
wearers  of  the  Blue  and  Gold,  but  were  defeated  by  a  score  of  60  to  42. 
Washington  came  next  with  17  points,  while  Oregon's  12  points  only  gave 
her  last  place.  H.  H.  Wood,  '13,  cut  one  second  off  his  time  in  the  mile  run, 
while  Beeson,  '13,  lowered  his  record  in  the  120-yard  hurdles,  covering  them  in 
two-fifths  of  a  second  better  time  than  the  week  before. 


A     CLOSE    FINISH     IN     THE    CENTURY 


Western  Conference  Meet 

Represented  by  a  team  of  only  four  men,  California  gained  third  place  in 
the  Western  Intercollegiate  Track  Meet  held  at  Minneapolis  on  June  3,  191 1. 
Missouri,  winner  of  the  contest,  scored  35  points,  Chicago  took  second  with 
25,  while  California's  third  place  was  gained  by  a  score  of  20. 

The  feature  of  the  clay  was  Allen's  performance  in  the  broad  jump. 
Besides  being  good  for  five  points,  his  leap  of  23  feet  1  inch  exceeded  the 
former  record  by  a  quarter  of  an  inch.  Beeson  tied  for  first  in  the  high  jump 
at  a  height  of  5  feet  g]/2  inches.  Second  place  in  the  low  hurdles  was  also 
captured  by  Beeson,  as  well  as  fourth  in  the  high  barriers. 

H.  H.  Wood  was  a  point  winner  in  the  distances,  his  second  place  in  the 
mile  and  a  third  in  the  two  mile  adding  four  points  to  the  California  score 
column.  The  mile  was  won  in  4:27,  and  Wood  was  caught  a  couple  of 
seconds  slower  in  4:29.     The  time  of  the  two-mile  event  was  9:50. 

The  shot  put  netted  another  point,  as  Hale's  distance  of  41  feet  10  inches- 
was  good  for  third  place.     First  place  was  won  by  a  put  of  42  feet  8  inches. 


252 


ATHLETICS 


ALLKN     MAKING    RECORD 


Preliminary  Season 

Not  overconfidence,  but  reasoning  based  on  actual  facts,  prompted  Cali- 
fornians  at  the  opening  of  the  191 2  track  season  to  look  upon  their  prospects  of 
success  in  a  sanguine  frame  of  mind.     Those  who  had  smashed  records  in  the 

191 1  meet  returned  with  few  exceptions;  the  squad  was  big,  and  willing.  Under 
the  able  tutelage  of  Walter  Christie,  Charlie  Volz  and  Captain  Kretsinger,  a  well- 
rounded  and   well-conditioned  team   was  turned  out.     Its  record   speaks   for  it. 

1912  will  go  down  in  history  as  a  famous  track  year.  The  only  blot  came  with 
the  abolition  of  the  Freshman  contest  with  Stanford.  For  this  a  meet  with  the 
University  of  Southern  California  was  substituted,  which  proved  entirely  suc- 
cessful. 


Early  Meets 

After  the  interclass,  won  by  the  Sophomores  with  very  little  trouble,  real 
training  began.  On  March  16th  the  Freshmen  met  Pomona.  They  were  badly 
defeated  by  the  exceptional  team  representing  the  Southern  institution,  by  the 
score  of  7*/Y2  to  44^ .  On  the  same  day  the  Varsity  displayed  its  superiority 
over  U.  S.  C,  winning  66^/3 — SS2A-  Shattuck's  throw  of  160  feet  3  inches  in 
the  hammer  was  the  only  sensational  performance. 

On  March  30th  the  Varsity  met  Pomona's  representatives  on  her  own  track. 
The  team  which  had  gained  a  victory  over  the  Freshmen  was  no  match  for  the 
Varsity,  which  won  by  99  points  to  23.  Fast  times  were  made,  ominous  of  the 
overwhelming  victory  to  come.  The  last  preliminary  meet  in  which  the  Varsity 
competed  was  that  with  the  Olympic  Club,  on  April  13th,  a  week  before  the  big 
meet.  The  showing  made  by  the  California  entries  was  gratifying  in  the  extreme, 
and  the  victory  was  well  won. 

253 


Stanton,    sprinter 
Taylor,    high  jumper 
Gabbert,   hammer  thrower 


254 


Vail,   pole  vaulter 


Hale,  shot  putter 
Kretsinger,   broad  jumper 
Kathbone,  two  miler 


ATHLETICS 


TODD  WINNING  THE  QUARTER 


Freshman  Track  Meet 

X  spite  of  the  fact  that  the  class  of  1915  was  deprived  of  the 
pleasure  of  meeting  the  Freshmen  from  Stanford  this  year,  the 
track  men  of  the  entrants  were  able  to  show  their  ability  and 
win  their  numerals  with  University  of  Southern  California. 
The  meet  was  held  on  California  oval  on  March  23.  Since  the 
Varsity  track  team  was  only  able  to  best  the  athletes  from  the  south  the 
week  before  by  a  narrow  margin,  the  most  enthusiastic  had  few  hopes  for 
a  Freshman  victory.  The  first  year  men  sprung  a  very  agreeable  surprise, 
and  were  only  nosed  out  of  first  place  by  the  narrow  margin  of  4^3  points, 
the  score  board  reading  at  the  completion  of  the  relay :  U.  S.  C,  63% ; 
Freshmen,  58^3.     The  score  follows: 


255 


Wallace,   high   hurdler 
Beeson,    hurdler 


Smith,  half  miler 
Shattuck,  hammer  thrower 
Crabbe,  two  miler 


Rice,    shot   putter 
Maclise,  hurdler 


256 


ATHLETICS 

Mile  run:  (i)  Torrance  (U.  S.  C),  (2)  Smith  (U.  S.  C),  (3)  Cooper  (C). 
Time  4  .^-3. 

100-yard  dash:  (1)  Throop  (U.  S.  C),  (2)  Stanton  (C),  (3)  Bradway 
(C).     Time,  :io-i. 

High  hurdles:  (1)  Kelly  (U.  S.  C),  (2)  McKim  (C),  (3)  Riddick  (C). 
Time,  :i6-i. 

440-yard  dash:  (1)  Todd  (C),  (2)  Hodges  (U.  S.  C),  Harlowe  (C)  and 
Davis  (U.  S.  C.)  tied.     Time,   :5i-4. 

Two  mile:  (1)  Swiggett  (U.  S.  C),  (2)  Gregory  (C),  (3)  Millar  (C). 
Time,   10:16-3. 

220-yard  dash:  (1)  Throop  (U.  S.  C),  (2)  Stanton  (C),  (3)  Hanson 
(U.  S.  C).     Time,  :23. 

880-yard  run:  (1)  Heisen  (C),  (2)  Tipton  (U.  S.  C),  (3)  Vedder  (C). 
Time,  2  :03~3. 

220-low  hurdles:  (1)  Kelly  (U.  S.  C),  (2)  Freeman  (U.  S.  C),  (3)  Wiley 
(C).      Time,    -.27. 

Hammer  throw:  (1)  Coolidge  (C)  ;  distance,  146  feet  4l/2  inches.  (2) 
Wiley  (C) ;  distance,  121  feet  8^  inches.  (3)  Kelly  (U.  S.  C.)  ;  distance,  in 
feet  10^2  inches. 

Shot  put:  (1)  Thomas  (C)  ;  distance,  41  feet  4%  inches.  (2)  Kelley 
(U.  S.  C),  (3)  Coolidge  (C). 

Pole  vault:  (1)  Watkins  (U.  S.  C.)  ;  height,  11  feet.  (2)  Gower  (C), 
Muege  (C),  and  Cookman  (U.  S.  C.)  tied;  height,  10  feet  6  inches. 

High  jump:  (1)  Rector  (C),  Earle  (U.  S.  C),  Bradway  (C),  Chaffee 
(U.  S.  C.)  tied;  height,  5  feet  8  inches. 

Broad  jump:  (1)  Earle  (U.  S.  C),  (2)  Bogardus  (C),  (3)  Bradway 
(C)  ;  distance,  21  feet  11*4  inches. 

Relay  won  by  California — Ellis,  Falk,  Todd  and  Stanton.  U.  S.  C.  team — 
Earle,  Hodge,  Cookman  and  Hanson. 


THE  HARVARD  STADIUM 


257 


Shattuck  making   record  throw 
Crabe    lowering   two-mile    time 


Rice's   famous  put 
Vail  vaulting 


258 


ATHLETICS 

Inter-Collegiate  Track  Meet 

HEN  Walter  Christie  made  the  statement  at  the  Track  Rally 
that  California  had  the  best  track  team  in  the  United  States, 
many  of  the  athletic  experts  smiled  and  intimated  that  Walter 
was  carried  away  by  his  loyalty.  But  had  those  experts  been 
at  Stanford  Oval  on  April  20th,  and  had  seen  the  Blue  and 
Gold  march  forward  to  such  a  victory,  they  would  have  agreed  to  every  word 
of  praise  given  the  team.  Even  the  most  enthusiastic  were  given  the  surprise 
of  their  lives  when  Captain  Kretsinger  led  his  men  to  a  victory  by  such  a 
great  margin. 

Despite  the  fact  the  weather  conditions  were  anything  but  ideal,  as  a 
stiff  breeze  blew  across  the  track,  eight  California-Stanfords  were  smashed 
and  others  dangerously  threatened.  The  mile  race  was  the  first  surprise  of 
the  day  and  rather  disheartened  many  who  had  everything  so  neatly  planned 
out  beforehand.  Both  Wood  and  Murray  of  Stanford  were  looked  upon  as 
contenders,  but  in  the  last  laps  a  dark  horse  appeared  in  the  form  of  Fletcher, 
of  Stanford,  who  passed  both  Wood  and  Murray  near  the  tape,  and  estab- 
lished a  new  mile  record  of  4:28^. 

The  cardinal  sprinters,  on  whom  their  supporters  pinned  their  faith, 
failed  to  make  a  showing,  and  the  jolity  on  the  California  bleachers  can 
hardly  be  imagined  when  the  Freshman  Stanton  and  Fui  Wood  carried  away 
the  honors  of  the  day  in  both  the  100-yard  and  220-yard  dash.  Tom  Coleman, 
the  skipper  of  the  opposition,  ran  third  in  the  century  and  was  unable  to  enter 
the  two-twenty. 

Maclise  was  working  well  and  established  a  new  mark  of  15:2  in  the 
high  hurdles,  with  Beeson  but  a  few  inches  behind.  Wallace  was  disqualified 
for  knocking  down  too  many  hurdles,  thus  allowing  Smith  to  annex  the 
extra  point. 

The  440-yard  race  furnished  plenty  of  excitement  for  the  bleachers. 
Todd,  the  speedy  freshman  sprinter  ran  Campbell  off  his  feet  and  broke  the 
tape  ahead.  Dodge,  of  Stanford,  took  second.  First  points  in  the  half-mile 
were  won  for  the  Cardinal  by  Bennett,  but  Smith  and  Heisen  acquired  the 
other  places. 

While  the  athletes  on  the  track  were  winning  laurels,  the  competition 
in  the  field  events  was  every  bit  as  exciting  and  quite  as  successful.  Shat- 
tuck  won  another  record  in  the  hammer,  with  a  throw  of  161  feet  two  inches. 
Rice  was  not  to  be  denied  a  laurel  crown  and,  putting  his  great  weight  behind 
the  shot,  recorded  a  put  of  46  feet  7^  inches — a  new  mark  for  the  future 
weight  men  to  try  for. 

259 


ALLEN    BREAKING    BROAD-JUMP    RECORD 
TODD    WINNING    THE    440 


ATHLETICS 

Allen,  not  content  with  his  former  record  in  the  broad  jump,  tightened 
his  belt  and  after  being  closely  pressed  by  Morrison,  made  a  wonderful  leap 
of  23  feet  %  inches.  Horine  and  Beeson  furnished  close  competition  in  the 
high  jump  for  some  time,  but  in  the  end  the  Stanford  man  was  successful, 
making  a  new  record  of  6  feet  3%  inches.  In  the  pole  vault,  Miller  and 
Vail  tied  for  first  at  12  feet.  The  relay  resulted  in  a  victory  for  Stanford's 
team,  which  made  a  new  record  of  4:22^. 

Following  is  a  complete  score  of  the  meet,  which  in  many  respects  was 
the  most  wonderful  ever  held  on  the  Coast : 

One-mile  run:  Won  by  Fletcher  (S)  ;  Wood  (C),  second;  Murray  (S), 
third.      Time  4:28^5. 

100-yard  dash:  Won  by  Stanton  (C)  ;  Wood  (C),  second;  Coleman  (S), 
third.     Time,  10:1. 

120-yard  hurdles:  Won  by  Maclise  (C) ;  Beeson  (C),  second;  Smith  (S). 
third.    Time,  15  .2. 

440-yard  dash:  Won  by  Todd  (C)  ;  Campbell  (S),  second;  Chase  (C), 
third.     Time,  50:3. 

Two-mile  run:    Won  by  Crabbe  (C)  ;  Dodge  (S),  second;  Hurni  (C), 
third.     Time,  9:55^- 

880-yard  run:  Won  by  Bennett  (S)  ;  Smith  (C),  second;  Heisen  (C), 
third.      Time  2  :oo. 

220-yard  hurdles:  Won  by  Maclise  (C)  ;  Beeson  (C),  second;  Kern  (S), 
third.     Time,  25  :i. 

220-yard  dash:  Won  by  Stanton  (C)  ;  Woods  (C),  second;  Brown  (S), 
third.     Time,  22  :2. 

Relay  :    Won  by  Stanford.     Time,  3  :22^. 

Hammer  throw:  Won  by  Shattuck  (C)  ;  Rice  (C),  second;  Woolley  (S), 
third.    Distance,  161  feet  2  inches. 

Shot  put:  Won  by  Rice  (C)  ;  Hale  (C),  second;  Woolley  (S),  third. 
Distance,  46  feet  7^  inches. 

High  jump:  Won  by  Horine  (S)  ;  Beeson  (C),  second;  Airola  (C)  and 
Hill  (C),  tied  for  third.     Height,  6  feet  3%  inches. 

Broad  jump:  Won  by  Allen  (C)  ;  Morrison  (S),  second;  Argabrite  (S), 
third.      Distance,  23  feet  4%  inches. 

Pole  vault:  Vail  (C)  and  Miller  (S),  tied  for  first;  Smith  (C),  Potter 
(C),  Young  (C),  Bangs  (C),  Stevens  (S)  and  Boulware  (S),  tied  for  third. 
Height,  12  feet. 

263 


ATHLETICS 


THE   VARSITY    EIGHT 


Northern  Trip — 1911 

OR  the  first  time  in  the  history  of  rowing  at  California  two  crews 
were  sent  north  to  row  against  Washington  University  at  Seattle. 
In  addition  to  the  Varsity  crew,  the  freshman  crew  which  met 
the  Stanford  freshmen  was  also  sent.  The  crews  went  north  via 
boat  on  May  17th.  The  races  took  place  on  May  26,  191 1. 
The  first  race  was  between  the  Freshman  crews.  The  Washington  fresh- 
men caught  perfectly,  but  the  California  freshmen  broke  water  and  secured 
a  poor  start.  The  Washington  crew  was  ahead  only  a  short  distance  at  the  first 
mile.  It  was  here  that  the  only  accident  occured  to  mar  the  day,  the  oarlock  of 
No.  5  breaking  in  the  California  boat.  The  freshmen  gamely  tried  to  continue 
the  race,  but,  seeing  it  was  useless,  dropped  out,  the  race  going  to  Washington. 

It  was  six  o'clock  before  the  two  Varsities  assumed  position  off  Leschi  for  the 
great  event  of  the  day.  The  first  mile  was  a  heartbreaking  pull,  the  two  crews 
keeping  up  a  terrible  pace,  while  neither  crew  could  seem  to  gain  decided  ad- 
vantage. After  passing  the  mile  post  Washington  was  seen  to  commence  to  pull 
away  from  the  California  crew.  Washington  continued  to  open  up  the  clear 
water  and  finished  seven  lengths  ahead,  having  covered  the  three  miles  in  the 
fast  time  of  16  minutes  and  22  seconds. 


266 


ATHLETICS 


VARSITY    IN    ACTION 


Boating 


NTEREST  displayed  in  previous  years  in  boating  was  main- 
tained throughout  this  entire  season.  On  the  morning  of 
February  24th  the  intcrclass  regatta  was  won  by  the  1914  crew. 
The  first  heat,  which  was  between  the  two  underclass  crews, 
resulted  in  a  victory  for  the  second  year  men.  They  covered 
the  mile  and  a  half  course  in  6  minutes  and  57  seconds.  The  heat  between 
the  two  upperclass  crews  was  won  by  the  juniors,  who,  after  a  short  rest, 
rowed  in  the  finals  with  the  sophomores.  A  series  of  unfortunate  accidents 
to  the  1913  boat  lost  them  the  race  to  the  sophomores  in  the  fast  time  of  6 
minutes  and  57  seconds. 


JUNIOR    CREW 


267 


ATHLETICS 


FRESHMEN  ON  THE  ESTUARY 


Freshman  Race 

Little  was  known  as  to  the  relative  ability  of  the  freshmen  crews  as  they 
took  their  positions  before  the  starting  line.  The  Stanford  crew  had  a 
slight  advantage  in  weight  over  California.  California's  stroke  was  taken 
sick  two  days  before  the  race  and  No.  2  moved  to  stroke.  The  freshman 
race  was  a  sensation  from  the  beginning  and  at  no  time  could  the  spectators 
who  thronged  the  shore  predict  who  would  finally  win.  In  the  last  quarter 
of  a  mile  the  boats  were  neck  and  neck,  Stanford  winning  by  one-third  of  a 
length  in  the  last  few  yards.  The  two  miles  were  done  in  ten  minutes  flat. 
The  line-up  of  the  freshmen  crews  follow : 

F.  D.  Halbert bow B.  D.  Sinclair 

G.  H.  Wilson 2 J.  S.  Jeffers 

C.    Z.    Sutton 3 G.  A.  Jacomini 

Herbert  Hardy 4 E.   B.  Wolford 

B.  T.  Rocca 5 G.  E.  Haggert 

R.  N.  Hallner,  Capt 6 F.  E.  Rehm 

L.  C.  Morehead 7 1.  M.  Hulsman 

R.  E.  Merritt stroke F.  O.  Olmstead 

H.  H.  Hope cox L.  F.  Rememan 


268 


ATHLETICS 


lUHWWHIWWIWW^rtiHIIUIIIIIJIIIII— 


•=  »iW«£»"»<> 


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FINISH   OF  THE   FRESHMAN   RACE 

Varsity  Race 

The  Stanford  Varsity,  with  four  veterans,  was  a  perfect  rowing  machine, 
and  close  followers  of  rowing  predicted  a  victory  for  them,  although  the 
entry  of  the  northern  crew  brought  into  the  race  an  element  of  uncertainty. 
Captain  Maynard's  men,  after  months  of  hard  training  and  early  morning 
work,  were  in  the  best  possible  condition,  and  fought  out  a  losing  race  to  the 
very  finish. 

The  race  started  shortly  before  10  o'clock,  Stanford  being  on  the  Oakland 
side,  Washington  on  the  Alameda  side,  with  California  in  the  center.  Wash- 
ington closed  over  toward  the  Stanford  crew,  forcing  California  back.  At  the 
two-mile  post  California  rallied,  but  could  not  regain  any  of  the  distance 
they  had  lost.  Stanford  finished  one  length  ahead  of  Washington,  with  Cali- 
ornia  five  lengths  behind.  The  time  for  the  race  was  16  minutes  43  seconds. 
This  was  much  slower  than  last  year's  time,  owing  to  the  wind  and  rough 
water.  Stanford  maintained  a  steady  stroke  of  about  38  to  the  minute, 
while  California's  stroke  was  shorter  and  faster,  Washington  maintaining  a 
mean  between  the  two. 


1  SBrSrl       vv      * 

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hH  w  Jfl  ^■S^^E\^^^K7  x  ^fc^  B  V 

FRESHMAN    EIGHT 


269 


ATHLETICS 


THE    VARSITY    SQUAD 

Basketball 

Minor  sports  during  the  college  year  just  past  have  flourished.  In- 
terest in  them  has  grown  steadily,  and  basketball  has  more  than  kept  pace 
with  the  rest. 

In  the  games  of  the  P.  A.  A.  this  year,  California's  five  came  to  the  front 
in  fine  style.  After  defeating  Stanford,  the  holder  of  the  San  Francisco  sub- 
league  unlimited  title,  and  after  eliminating  every  good  team  on  this  side 
the  bay,  California's  Varsity  team  went  to  Stockton  on  March  2nd  to  contest 
with  the  Stockton  All-Stars  for  the  permanent  silver  cup.  This  had  been 
won  twice  previously  by  the  interior  five ;  a  third  win  meant  continued 
possession.  A  hard  fight  ensued  in  which  Stockton  came  out  victorious  by 
a  29-17  score. 

The  145-pound  team  won  the  P.  A.  A.  championship  by  besting  Cogswell 
Polytechnical  College,  32-15. 

The  Varsity  five  was  made  up  as  follows : 

Forwards,  C.  Carpenter,  '12;  S.  L.  Jory,  '12  (captain).  Centers,  Maurice 
Joses,  '13;  R.  A.  Gilbert,  '12  (substitute).  Guards,  O.  S.  Norton,  '13;  L.  E. 
Joses,  '12;  R.  Fischer,  '13  (substitute). 

O.  S.  Norton,  '13,  has  been  elected  captain  for  next  year. 


272 


ATHLETICS 


Swimming 

OT  the  least  of  the  University's  acquisitions  during  the  past  year 
was  the  swimming  pool.  This  has  proved  itself  to  be  one  of 
the  most  valuable  and  useful  units  of  the  many  which  go  to 
make  up  a  well-rounded  athletic  equipment.  For  men  who, 
prior  to  the  opening  of  the  pool,  had  not  had  an  opportunity  to 
learn  to  swim,  the  open-air  tank  was  invaluable. 

As  a  strictly  athletic  center  it  served  as  the  meeting  ground  for  the  inter- 
class  races  in  the  fall.  Its  future  possibilities  are  too  great  to  be  minimized, 
not  only  in  this  regard,  but  in  those  of  personal  training  as  well.  It  is  open  to 
male  members  of  the  A.  S.  U.  C.  The  A.  W.  S.  expects  the  new  Hearst 
pool  to  be  built  shortly,  which  will  accommodate  their  needs. 

It  is  evident  that  the  new  pool  has  been  the  main  stimulus  to  the  greater 
interest  taken  in  swimming  during  the  past  year.  California  now  ranks, 
in  swimming  records,  with  most  of  the  Eastern  universities. 


273 


ATHLETICS 


Fall  Swimming 

The  initial  interclass  swimming  meet  was  held  last  fall  in  the  new 
swimming  tank  in  Strawberry  Canyon,  and  the  success  attending  the  meet 
assured  it  a  permanent  place  in  student  athletics.  Sophomore  swimmers 
carried  off  the  honors,  obtaining  a  score  of  28  points.  The  Juniors  ranked 
second  with  24  points,  while  the  Seniors  took  14  and  the  Freshmen  6. 


9  i 


274 


ATHLETICS 
Soccer  Football 

Soccer  football  has  taken  its  place  in  the  front  rank  of  minor  sports 
during  the  past  year.  Almost  daily  practice  was  held  during  the  fall  under  the 
direction  of  T.  A.  Davidson,  '10,  and  matches  were  arranged  with  nearby 
teams. 

In  the  intercollegiate  series  with  Stanford,  California  was  defeated  by 
a  close  margin.  It  is  not  too  much  to  expect  that,  in  the  near  future,  soccer 
will  become  a  sport  which  bids  high  for  actual  intercollegiate  recognition. 


Tennis 

Winning  three  out  of  five  matches,  Stanford  defeated  California  in  the 
1912  tennis  tournament,  held  on  the  California  courts  April  6th  of  this  year. 
The  matches  were  closely  contested  and  it  was  not  until  the  very  end  that 
the  Cardinal  finally  triumphed. 

In  the  singles  Captain  H.  N.  Rogers  was  defeated  by  Sheldon  of  Stan- 
ford, a  powerful  and  heady  player,  who  proved  himself  strong  at  critical 
moments.      The  score  was  6-0,  6-3. 

Following  this  match,  Frees  and  Breeden,  the  second  doubles  team,  defeat- 
ed a  corresponding  duo  of  Stanfordites,  winning  three  decisive  sets  and 
victory.     Score — 6-3,  6-2,  6-1. 

On  Saturday  morning  R.  L.  Murray,  Stanford's  captain,  bested  C.  A. 
Rogers  in  a  close  and  exciting  match.  Rogers  won  the  first  set,  6-4,  lost  the 
second,  10-8,  and  after  a  determined  stand  dropped  the  third,  7-5. 

Frees  of  California  then  met  Morgan  of  Stanford,  losing  3-6,  8-10.  With 
this  loss  went  the  tournament.  Lastly  came  the  final  doubles  match  between 
Rogers  brothers  of  California  and  Murray  and  Morgan  of  Stanford.  Here 
the  Blue  and  Gold  waved  once  more,  the  score  standing  2-6,  6-2,  6-3,  4-6,  6-2. 

275 


ATHLETICS 


C 


Wearers  of  the  "C" 


I.   G.    Markwart,   '10 
H.  H.  Ashley,  '10 

C.  W.  Pauly,  '11 

J.    DWIGGINS,    '11 

B.  A.    SWARTZ,    '11 

D.  P.  Hardy,  '11 

C.  A.  Phleger,  '12 

E.  L.  Watts,  '12 
A.  W.  Elliott,  '12 
L.  M.  Morris,  '13 
J.  A.  Stroud,  '13 
M.  T.  Farmer,  '09 
C.  A.  Allen,  '12 
C.   W.  Evans,  '12 
C.  S.  Wheeler,  '12 
S.  B.  Peart,  '13 

J.  R.  Fairbanks,  '11 
L.  K.  Carpenter,  '12 
J.  G  Schaeffer,  '09 
H.  H.  Phleger,  '12 
G.  D.  Hansen,  '12 
W.  N.  King,  '13 
C.  W.  Vilas,  '11 
G  A.  Kretsinger,  '11 
W.  G  Donald,  '11 
A.  J.  Evers,  '11 


C.  L.  Butler,  '12 
R.  M.  Hill,  '13 
R.   C.    McGee,  '12 
J.  A.  Potter,  '13 
H.  G.  Gabbert,  '12 
L.  S.   Ready,  '12 
A.   W.  Taylor,  '12 
E.  N.  Chapman,  '11 

C.  Claudius,  '12 

A.  J.  Rathbone,  '12 
J.  A-  Arnott,  '12 

D.  G  Maclise,  '14 

E.  R.  Crabbe,  '14 
R.  A.  Vitousek,  '12 
L.  S.  Rathbone,  '14 
A.  I.  Smith,  '14 

G  F  Hale,  '12 
G  D.  Wood,  '14 
K.   W.   Shattuck,  '14 
J.  U.  Calkins,  '11 
L.  W.  Meyer,  '14 

F.  H.  Allen,  '13 
E.  M.  Vail,  '12 
O.   R.   Smith,  '13 

E.  I.  Beeson,  '13 

F.  B.  Rice,  '14 


S.  L.  Brown,  '11 
H.  H.  Wood,  '13 
D.  G.  Christen,  '09 
R.  C.  Stoner,  '12 
W.  W.  Gay,  '13 
R.  W.  Coane,  '13 
W.  M.  Forker,  '12 
F.  W.  Rubke,  '14 
J.  E.  Barieau,  '11 
C.  V.  Goodwin,  '14 
W.  H.  Greenlaw,  '11 
T.  A.  Davidson,  '10 
W.  H.  Schroeder,  '10 
R.  Maynard,  '12 
S.  Malatesta,  '12 
H.  C.  Kelly,  '12 
M.  H.  Long,  '10 

B.  M.  Frees,  '12 
H.  N.  Rogers,  '12 

C.  A.  Rogers,  '14 

Honorary  Members 

Walter  Christie 
Charlie  Volz 


276 


WOMEN'S    ATHLETICS 

Tennis 

After  weeks  of  hard  practice  the  University  of  California  Women's  Tennis 
Team  proved  its  superiority  over  the  Cardinal  representatives  in  five  hard- 
fought  matches  played  at  Stanford  on  the  Encina  Hall  courts.  A  high  wind, 
which  blew  directly  across  the  courts,  made  the  playing  of  accurate  tennis 
particularly  difficult,  and  all  credit  should  be  given  to  the  California  women 
for  their  brilliant  playing  under  such  trying  conditions  and  on  strange  courts. 
Those  who  braved  the  elements  were  amply  rewarded  both  in  the  class  of 
tennis  played  and  in  the  seeing  of  another  California  victory  added  to  the  long 
list   of   triumphs   achieved   over  the   Cardinal    which   has   marked   this   year. 

Singles:  Marian  Hall  (C)  defeated  Laura  Herron  (S),  Elsie  Parker 
(S)  defeated  Constance  Davis  (C),  Mary  Taney  (C)  defeated  Elizabeth 
Bingham  (S). 

Doubles:  Constance  Davis  and  Marian  Hall  (C)  defeated  Laura  Herron 
and  Elsie  Parker  (S),  Frances  Jackling  and  Marion  Arendt  (C)  defeated 
Joyce  Wauch  and  Catherine  Cox  (S). 

Basketball 

The  basketball  season  culminated  this  year  in  a  game  with  the  Univer- 
sity of  Nevada,  held  on  March  16.  The  contest  was  fast  but  the  California 
nine  showed  its  speed  and  ability  to  such  advantage  that  Nevada  was  held 
down  to  but  12  points,  while  California  scored  38. 

The  line-up  follows :  Nevada — Forwards,  Lena  Hauss,  Lysle  Rusby, 
Martha  Noble ;  guards,  Frances  Smith,  Ethel  Brown,  Lillian  Davey ;  centers, 
Dora  Nelson,  Sylvia  Bawer,  Betty  Riley.  California :  Forwards,  Katherine 
Asher,  '11,  Daisy  Newby,  '13,  Mattie  Himes,  '13;  guards,  Doris  Spencer,  '12, 
Edith  Frisbie,  '14,  Agnes  Madsen,  '15;  centers,  Frances  Jacklin,  '14, 
Ysabel  Forker,  '15,  Lorena  Buck,  '14.  The  winning  team  was  captained  by 
Doris  Spencer  and  coached  by  Mary  Shafter,  to  whom  great  credit  is  due. 

Boating 

Woman's  Day  saw  the  annual  interclass  regatta,  held  on  Lake  Merritt. 
In  the  light  crew  race  the  junior  boat  reached  the  goal  first,  but  little  ahead 
of  the  fast  freshman  skiff.  The  winning  crew  consisted  of  Patricia  Moors- 
head,  stroke  and  captain;  Kathryn  McCabe,  bow;  Helen  White,  coxswain. 

1914  won  the  heavy  crew  race,  getting  off  to  a  good  start  and  besting 
the  others  handily.  The  juniors  were  second,  the  freshmen  third  and  the 
seniors  last.  The  winning  crew  was  Amy  McLauchlan,  stroke ;  Ethel  Mur- 
ray, bow;  Edith  Small,  coxswain. 

277 


ATHLETICS 


The  Intercollegiate  Record 


FOOTBALL 

1892— Stanford   14-10 

1892— Tie  game  10-10  1893 . 

1893— Tie  game  6-6  1894. 

1894— Stanford  6-0  1895 . 

1895— Tie  game  6-6  1896. 

1896— Stanford  20-0  1897. 

1897— Stanford  28-0  1898. 

1898— California  22-0  1899. 

1899— California 30-0  1900. 

1900— Stanford  ..' 5-0  1901 . 

1901— California  2-0  1902. 

1902— California 16-0  1903. 

1903— Tie  game  6-6  1904. 

1904— Stanford  18-0  1905. 

1905— Stanford  12-5 

1906— Stanford  6-3  1907. 

1907—  Stanford   21-11  1908. 

1908— Stanford 12-3  1909. 

1909— California 19-13  1910. 

1910— California 25-6  1911. 

1911— California 21-3  1912. 


TRACK 


CALIFORNIA    STANFORD 


91 
90 
67 

56 

62/ 

88 

74 

81 

85 

76/ 

58/ 

53 

72% 


1906 No  meet 

57 

63/s 

56 

55/ 

87/3 

80/3 


35 

36 

45 

56 

49/ 

38 

38 

43 

32 

43/ 

63/3 

69 

49/ 

65 

583/s 

66 

663/s 

34/3 

41/ 


INTERCOLLEGIATE  TRACK  RECORDS 


100-yard  dash 10  seconds  

220-yard  dash 22  seconds  

440-yard  dash 50  seconds   

880-yard  run 1  minute  58/  seconds  , 

1-mile  run  4  minutes  28/  seconds . 

2-mile  run  9  minutes  553/5  seconds . 

120-yard  hurdles  15/  seconds 

220-yard  hurdles  25  seconds   

Shot  put 46  feet  7$£  inches 

Hammer  throw  161  feet  2  inches 

Pole  vault  12  feet  6/  inches 

Broad  jump    23  feet  4j^  inches   


Cadogan  (C) 
Coleman  (S) 
.  Wyman  (S) 
..  Dowd  (C) 
Fletcher  (S) 
.  Crabbe  (C) 
.  Maclise  (C) 
. .  Beeson  (C) 
. ...  Rice  (C) 
Shattuck  (C) 
...  Scott  (S) 
...   Allen  (C) 


High  jump    6  feet  3/  inches Horine  (S) 

Relay 3  minutes  22/;  seconds Stanford 


278 


DANCES 


DANCES 


SENIOR    BALL 

Dorothy  Fish,  General  Chairman 
C.  W.  Evans,  Floor  Manager 


RECEPTION    COMMITTEE 
Brenta  Haynes,  Chairman 
Agnes  Scholl 
Alice  Maxwell 
Katherine  McElrath 
Elaine  Standish 
Elsa  Schilling 
Gladys  Lewis 
J.  B.  Black 
J.  B.  Parkinson 
Rey  Maynard 
H.  G.  Gabbert 
B.  M.  Frees 
E.  L.  Watts 


ARRANGEMENTS 
H.  E.  Haven,  Chairman 
Goldie  Hulbert 
Carmelita  Woerner 
Dolores  Bradley 
Grace  Griffiths 
Pearl  Kenyon 
Jeanette  Steward 
H.  R.  Lawton 


DECORATION    COMMITTEE 
R.  H.  Clark,  Chairman 
Lulu  Rubke 
May  Van  Maren 
Hollace  Shaw 
Grace  Moore 
Grace  Hamilton 
Helen  Runyon 
E.  C.  Livingston 
H.  S.  Yates 
W.  P.  Stanton 
J.  J.  Parker 
T.  B.  Rice 
R.  A.  Vitousek 

A.  W.  Elliott 

COMMITTEE 
N.  P.  Searls 

B.  D.  Dexter 
G.  N.  Browning 
W.  H.  Smythe 
T.  B.  Kittredge 
G.  E.  Noyes 
G.  M.  Simonson 
G.  D.  Wimp 


280 


DANCES 


JUNIOR  PROM 

H.  C.  McClelland,  General  Chairman  Junior  Day 
S.  B.  Peart,  Floor  Manager 


ARRANGEMENTS    COMMITTEE 
W.  W.  Beatty,  Chairman 
J.  E.  Gardner 
J.  T.  Gribner 
A.  W.  Paine 
J.  A.  Owen 
R.  L.  Chamberlain 
F.  D.  Stephens 
E.  H.  Rhodes 
L.  A.  Myers 
Enid  Watkins 
Constance  Davis 
Elna  Clifford 
Margaret  Locan 
Ruth  Ruddock 
Margery  Glass 
Rose  Farrell 

DECORATION    COMMITTEE 
J.  A.  Stroud,  Chairman 

R.   W.    COANE 

D.  E.  Alvord 
D.  M.  Drumheller 
Burt  Winslow 
Arthur  Eaton 
H.   M.   Woolley 
R.  M.  Hii.l 
Nan  Brunk 
Licetta  Bromley 
May  Christal 
Margaret  Hodgen 
Elsiedora  Brink 


RECEPTION  COMMITTEE 
C.  M.  Torrey,  Chairman 
R.  L.  Berglund 
R.  P.  Shields 
Lloyd  Sloane 
A.  V.  Turner 
M.  K.  Campbell 
A.  P.  Cortelyou 
E.  G.  Hill 
Jean  Cunningham  * 
Ruth  Ware 
Jennie  McDonald 
Lenore  Salsig 
Clerimond   Withers 
Ada  Cline 


281 


DANCES 


SOPHOMORE  HOP 

Rhett  McMahon,  General  Chairman 

D.  G.  Maclise,  Floor  Manager 

E.  S.  Schweninger,  Assistant  Floor  Manager 


ARRANGEMENTS    COMMITTEE 
M.   P.   Griffiths,   Chairman 
Hazel  Ingels 
Deborah  Dyer 
Genevieve  McGinnis 
Isabel  Hall 
Jennie- Kreyenhagen 
Eleanor  Webster 
C.  A.  Rogers 
W.  J.  Goebel 
L.  E.  Doan 
J.  E.  Hanna 

W.  W.  SORRICK 

W.  C.  Tupper 
DECORATION  COMMITTEE 
M.  B.  Reed,  Chairman 
Hertha  Herrmann 
Helen  Waterman 
Marie  Phleger 
Minerva  Osborn 
Helen  Dabney 
F.  F.  Howard 
C.  L.  Thiele 
A.  A.   Hinchman 
L.  A.  Eggleston 
F.  D.  Hihn 

282 


RECEPTION  COMMITTEE 
C.  A.  Buckley,  Jr.,  Chairman 

Rosalie  Ogden 

Eleanor  Jackson 

Marguerite  Amoss 

Hermine  Henze 

Gracella  Scotford 

J.  J.  Meigs 

J.  D.  Basye 

E.  H.  Downing 

H.  W.  Fleming 

E.  C.  Brown 


DANCES 


FRESHIE  GLEE 

D.  C.  Mitchum,  General  Chairman 
T.  E.  Haley,  Floor  Manager 


ARRANGEMENTS    COMMITTEE 

Harcourt  Blades,  Chairman 
Mabel  Bontz 
Clara  Cooper 
Elizabeth  Page 
Beth  Johnson 
Hazel  Pfitzer 
F.  G.  Steward 
W.  D.  Ellis 
J.  W.  Tully 
H.  M.  Pierce 
H.  L.  Jones 

DECORATION    COMMITTEE 

E.  T.  Parrish,  Chairman 
Alice  Freuler 
Louise  Roberts 
Ysabel  Forker 
Florence  Copeland 
Erma  Taggart 
Lurline  Browning 
S.  M.  Wynne 
V.  H.  Doyle 
A.  K.  Sherwin 
F.  G.  Knoop 
R.  M.  Allen 
D.  J.  Bogardus 
H.  W.  Harlowe 


RECEPTION    COMMITTEE 

W.  B.  Hubbard,  Chairman 
Catherine  Robinson 
Antoinette  Dye 
Irma  Riley 
Gertrude  Rosenthal 
Pearl  Pierce 
Evelyn  Wacener 
L.  R.  Turner 
L.  A.  Daugheriy 
H.  A.  McNeill 
K.  C.  Ables 
C.  J.  Wetzel 
J.  A.  Waters 


283 


DANCES 


UNIVERSITY    ASSEMBLY 


Irwin  Campbell  Berry,  Chairman 
Harold  Augustus  Fletcher 
Cecil  Temple  Thomas 


Archie  James  Beckett 
Benjamin  Callister  Corlett 
Bert  Betheford  Banta 


FRATERNITIES 


Zeta  Psi 
Chi  Phi 
Delta  Kappa  Epsilon 


Beta  Theta  Pi 
Phi  Gamma  Delta 
Sigma  Chi 


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284 


DANCES 


MILITARY    BALL 

Captain  W.  P.  Tufts,  General  Chairman 

K.  C.  Mohrhardt,  Floor  Manager 


ARRANGEMENTS   COMMITTEE 
Captain  A.  F.  Bridge,  Chairman 
Captain  H.  M.  Albright 
Captain  L.  W.  Allen 
Captain  T.  A.  Bither 
Captain  M.  J.  Dillman 
Lieutenant  B.  D.  Dexter 
Lieutenant  A.  B.  Tinning 
Lieutenant  C  L.  Le  Baron 
Lieutenant  L.  S.  Davis 


RECEPTION  COMMITTEE 
Captain  F.  L.  Wilson,  Chairman 
Captain  E.  D.  McNear 
Captain  A.  T.  Brown 
Captain  J.  R.  Quinn 
Lieutenant  C.  S.  Wheeler 
Lieutenant  M.  R.  Robbins 
Lieutenant  C.  C.  Rae 


ORGANIZATIONS 


ORGANIZATIONS 
Alumni  Association 

URING  the  past  year,  the  Alumni  Association,  which  was  founded 
in  1872,  has  been  represented  by  an  unusually  efficient  set  of 
officers.  This  is  the  third  consecutive  year  during  which  President 
James  K.  Moffitt  has  served  as  head  of  the  Association.  The 
University  has  conferred  in  its  history  9,372  degrees,  and  every 
living  alumnus  is  included  in  the  Alumni  Association  by  its  constitution.  The 
interest  of  the  graduates  has  been  invited  by  various  opportunities  for  alumni 
activity.  The  organization  of  local  clubs,  the  entertainment  of  University  pro- 
fessors and  other  officials  in  various  parts  of  the  country,  the  exposition  of  the 
true  purpose  of  the  University  as  a  single  head  of  a  single  and  united  system  of 
public  instruction,  and  the  conduct  of  the  California  Alumni  Weekly  constitute 
some  of  the  opportunities.  Together  with  the  president  of  the  Alumni  Asso- 
ciation, President  Wheeler  made  an  extended  visit  early  in  November  on  behalf  of 
the  Alumni  Association  and  chiefly  concerned  with  the  meeting  of  California 
alumni.  They  were  hospitably  received  by  the  graduates  in  San  Luis  Obispo, 
Santa  Barbara,  Ventura,  Los  Angeles,  San  Diego  and  Visalia. 

The  officers  of  the  Association  are:  President,  James  K.  Moffitt,  '86;  first 
vice-president,  Orrin  K.  McMurray,  90;  second  vice-president,  Miss  Jessica  B. 
Peixotto,  '94;  treasurer,  Perry  T.  Tompkins,  '92;  secretary,  Milton  T.  Farmer, 
'09.  Councilors:  Frank  Otis,  73;  Geo.  Edwards,  '84;  Wallace  I.  Terry,  90; 
M.,  '92;  C.  Chapel  Judson,  Haydn  M.  Simmons,  Ph.G.,  95;  T.  A.  Perkins,  '96; 
Duncan  McDuffie,  '99 ;  Louis  Graham,  D.D.S.,  04 ;  Max  Thelen,  '04 ;  Farnham  P. 
Griffiths,   06. 

University  of  California  Clubs 

The  year  just  closed  has  been  marked  with  prosperity  for  University  of 
California  Clubs,  and  particularly  so  for  the  one  in  San  Francisco.  A  number 
of  new  clubs  have  been  founded  in  California  and  in  more  remote  portions  of 
the  country.  The  San  Francisco  Club  has  been  the  headquarters  for  graduate 
as  well  as  undergraduate  men  in  that  city.  A  feature  of  the  work  this  year 
has  been  the  monthly  dinners,  at  which  addresses  by  well  known  members  of 
the  University  faculty  and  alumni  body  have  been  made. 

The  officers  of  the  San  Francisco  Club  are :  President,  A.  E.  Graupner, 
'97  ;  vice-president,  Louis  Bartlett,  '93  ;  secretary,  Wm.  J.  Hayes,  '09  ;  treasurer, 
Dr.  C.  B.  Porter,  '96. 


288 


ORGANIZATIONS 


i2sPS 

S3S5 

H 

n 

Associated  Graduate  Students 

HE  Associated  Graduate  Students  is  an  outgrowth  of  the 
Graduate  Club  which  was  formed  in  1895,  with  30  or  40  mem- 
bers. In  1903  a  constitution  was  adopted  under  the  present 
name,  and  now,  with  the  enrollment  increased  to  more  than 
450  members,  the  constitution  has  become  inadequate  for  the 
needs  of  the  organization  and  is  at  present  undergoing  a  thorough  revision. 
The  registration  of  graduate  students  for  the  whole  year  is  555,  repre- 
senting about  100  universities  altogether,  among  which  are  six  in  foreign 
countries.  California  graduates  make  up  about  half  the  number,  the  other 
universities  furnishing  anywhere  from  one  up  to.  twenty,  Stanford  being  the 
highest,  with  the  latter  number. 

For  this  reason  the  organization  of  the  Associated  Graduate  Student  Body 
is  difficult  to  establish  and  maintain.  It  is  a  collection  of  scattered  units 
which  have  no  continuous  connection  with  any  •  other  organization ;  it  is 
compelled  to  organize  anew  each  year  and  to  elect  officers  at  the  beginning  of 
the  fall  semester,  who  have  no  small  job  to  bring  the  graduates  together. 

Bit  is  gratifying  to  see  that  the  Associated  Graduate  Students 
organization  is  serving  a  useful  purpose  in  the  University ;  it  affords 
a  means  whereby  the  graduates  from  other  universities  can  get  ac- 
quainted and  become  Californians  in  spirit,  both  in  social  and  aca- 
demic circles.  Questions  regarding  degrees  and  regulations  are 
discussed  fully  with  the  faculty.  The  organization  serves  to  make 
the  life  of  the  graduate  student  a  real  pleasure,  rather  than  a  tedious 
grind  for  a  high  degree. 
Officers:  President,  A.  J.  Eddy,  '10;  vice-president,  T.  A.  Davidson,  '10; 
secretary,  Miss  Rose  Gardner,  '11;  treasurer,  Ray  Hays,  '11. 


289 


^ 

s*ts 

W2 

Is 

ORGANIZATIONS 

Associated  Students 

H ROUGH  the  support  of  the  largest  membership  in  its  history 
the  Associated  Students  has  accomplished  several  things  during  the 
past  year.  The  way  has  also  been  paved  for  the  settlement  of 
numerous  questions  confronting  the  A.  S.  U.  C.  In  the  fall  term 
there  were  2955  members,  in  the  spring,  2065.  Of  these  the 
number  of  women  holding  A.  S.  U.  C.  cards  was,  in  the  first  term,  1039;  in  the 
second,  682.  The  figures  show  that  the  increase  in  membership  of  the  Association 
is  proportionate  to  the  growth  of  the  student  body. 

Most  important  among  the  things  accomplished  is  the  securing  of  a  per- 
manent site  for  a  new  running  track.  The  Associated  Students  has  agreed  to 
purchase  and  deed  to  the  Regents  $22,000  worth  of  land  not  now  owned  by  the 
University,  in  return  for  which  a  promise  has  been  given  that  the  site  now 
occupied  by  Hearst  Hall  and  several  other  buildings  of  a  temporary  nature  will 
be  set  aside  for  use  as  a  permanent  quarter-mile  track.  Graduate  Manager 
Milton  T.  Farmer  has  already  asserted  the  options  on  several  pieces  of  property 
in  that  tract  and  has  deeded  them  to  the  Regents.  The  A.  S.  U.  C.  will  also  bear 
the  expense  of  moving  the  buildings.  The  total  cost  of  the  undertaking  will  be 
around  $50,000.  The  entire  transaction  can  be  completed  without  involving  the 
Association  in  debt.     The  track,  it  is  expected,  will  be  completed  in  1915. 

Various  matters  of  permanent  improvement,  such  as  the  installing  of  drain 
wells  under  the  surface  of  California  Field  and  the  repairing  of  bleachers,  have 
been  effected,  at  an  expense  of  about  $2000. 

Following  the  agitation  started  last  year,  a  radical  change  has  been  brought 
about  in  the  organization  of  the  Students'  Co-operative  Society.  Under  the 
new  constitution  of  the  store,  every  member  of  the  A.  S.  U.  C.  holding  member- 
ship in  the  Society  is  entitled  to  rebates  on  purchases,  and  has  a  vote  for  the 
directors,  while  the  graduate  manager  and  president  of  the  A.  S.  U.  C.  are  ex 
officio  members  of  the  board.  A  surplus  fund  has  been  put  into  the  hands  of  the 
Regents,  to  be  kept  until  needed  for  the  equipment  of  permanent  quarters. 

All  the  students  of  the  University  turned  out  on  Labor  Day,  February  29, 
and  showed  their  loyalty  to  California  in  the  construction  of  a  permanent  main 
roadway  provided  for  in  the  Hearst  plans. 

Other  matters  have  been  dealt  with  by  the  officers  and  committees  of  this 
Association.  Supplementing  the  work  of  the  Undergraduate  Student  Affairs 
Committee  in  dealing  with  cheating  in  examinations  and  in'  building  up  the 
Honor  Spirit  in  all  student  relations  there  has  been  created  the  Undergraduate 
Student  Welfare  Committee.  This  committee  has  power  to  recommend, 
to  the  proper  authority,  action  on  all  matters  of  concern  to  the  student  body. 

292 


N.  B.  DRURY 


LYMAN  GRIMES 


ORGANIZATIONS 

It  is  representative  of  the  women  as  well  as  the  men, 
and  is  drawn  from  the  four  classes. 

The  committees  for  1911-12  were: 
Executive  Committee :    President,  N.  B.  Drury, 
'12;   vice-president,    R.    C.    McGee,   '12;    secretary, 
Lyman    Grimes,    '13;    athletic    representative,    first 
term,  A.  W.  Elliott,  '12;  second  term,  C.  A.  Allen, 
'12;  faculty  representative,  Prof.  Edmund  O'Neill; 
alumni  representative,  Mr.  S.  C.  Irving;  graduate  manager,  M.  T.  Farmer,  '09. 
Intercollegiate  Agreement  Committee:     Chairman,  C.  A.  Phleger,  '12;  Judge 
E.  J.  Brown,  '98;  M.  T.  Farmer,  '09. 

Football  Rules  Committee :  Chairman,  J.  G.  Schaeffer ;  M.  T.  Farmer,  '09 ; 
A.  W.  Elliott,  '12. 

Rally  Committee:  Chairman,  H.  C.  Kelly,  '12;  H.  N.  Rogers,  '12;  M.  L. 
Dinkelspiel,  '12;  H.  H.  Phleger,  '12;  L.  R.  Miller,  '12;  R.  A.  Silent,  '13;  J.  J. 
Miller,  '13;  E.  F.  Sullivan,  '13;  F.  H.  Allen,  '13. 

Dormitory  Committee:  Chairman,  E.  G.  Clewe,  '12;  E.  C.  Livingston,  '12; 
R.  P.  Wisecarver,  '12;  M.  J.  Dillman,  '12;  G.  B.  Moody,  '13;  T.  B.  Dunn,  '13; 
O.  R.  Smith,  '13;  W.  G.  Marvin,  '14;  C.  H.  Howard,  '14;  R.  B.  Watt,  '14. 

Debating  Council:  Chairman,  F.  M.  Shipper,  '12;  from  the  Senate — J.  G. 
Sweet,  '12,  and  J.  U.  Calkins,  Jr.,  '11 ;  from  the  Congress — H.  C.  Kelly,  '12,  and 
T.  B.  Kittredge,  '12  (secretary). 

Student  Affairs  Committee :  Chairman  ex  officio,  N.  B.  Drury,  '12;  J.  B. 
Black,  '12;  M.  A.  Cartwright,  '12;  J.  G.  Sweet,  '12;  C.  S.  Wheeler,  Jr.,  '12. 

Student  Welfare  Committee:  Chairman  spring  term,  E.  L.  Watts,  '12;  chair- 
man fall  term,  C.  L.  Butler,  '12;  B.  S.  Clendennin,  '12;  E.  A.  Abeel,  '12;  T.  J. 
Ledwich,  '12 ;  S.  L.  Arnot,  '13  ;  R.  G.  Sproul,  '13  ;  R.  C.  Branion,  '14  (secretary  first 
term);  H.  Flemming,  '14  (secretary  second  term);  E.  J.  Fenstermacher,  '15; 
May  Chase,  '12  (chairman  women's  committee)  ;  Alice  Morse,  '12;  Ethel  Lockhart, 
'12;  Evelyn  Steel,  '13;  Ada  Swortzel,  '13;  Gertrude  Hawk,  '14;  Etta 
Broughton,  '15. 

Blue  and  Gold  Advisory  Committee:  Chairman,  E.  M.  Einstein,  '12; 
R.  H.  Clark,  '12;  R.  C.  Ingram,  '12;  M.  A.  Cartwright,  '12;  C.  N.  Hackett,  '12; 
C.  M.  Torrey.  '13;  R.  W.  Rust,  '13;  F.  H.  Partridge,  '14;  M.  P.  Griffiths,  '14. 

Labor  Day  Committee:  General  chairman,  H.  H.  Phleger,  '12;  publicity, 
M.  L.  Dinkelspiel,  '12;  entertainment,  H.  G.  Gabbert,  '12;  organization,  J.  R. 
Quinn,  '12;  engineering,  L.  S.  Ready,  '12;  equipment,  R.  A.  Silent,  '13. 


293 


ORGANIZATIONS 


J/^tS 

^S 

m 

Associated  Woman  Students 

HE  Associated  Woman  Students  of  the  University  of  California 
was  organized  in  1894  for  the  control  of  all  matters  of  special 
interest  to  the  women  students.  The  primary  purpose  of  the 
organization  is  to  bring  the  women  more  closely  together  by  foster- 
ing democratic  social  activities,  and  by  interesting  them  in  the  vari- 
ous athletic,  musical,  literary  and  artistic  pursuits  of  the  Campus.  The  women  of 
the  University  inaugurated  a  new  custom  during  the  year  1911-1912  by  giving 
a  large  open-air  pageant.  It  is  to  be  hoped  that  this  initial  attempt  will  so  far 
succeed  as-to  insure  the  continuance  and  growth  of  this  project  into  a  performance 
which  shall  yearly  bring  out  real  creative  talent,  and  become  a  tradition  of  intrinsic 
worth  to  the  University  and  its  friends. 

On  November  23,  191 1,  the  Senior  Women's  Hall  was  auspiciously  opened  by 
the  women  of  191 2  and  the  graduates — a  most  happy  occasion.      The  hall  will 


LORRAINE    ANDREWS,    '12 


HARRIET     JUDD,     '13 


inevitably  render  the  work  of  the  Association  more  effective  from  now  on.      A 
joint  committee  of  men  and  women,  known  as  the  Student  Welfare  Committee, 


294 


ORGANIZATIONS 

has  been  created  and  endeavors  to  work  in  conjunction  with  the  two  Student 
Affairs  Committees  in  creating  and  upholding  the  Honor  Spirit  in  the 
University. 

The  Executive  Committee  of  the  Associated  Woman  Students  follows  : 


Lorraine  Andrews,  '12,  President 

Florence  Doyle,  '12,  First  Vice-President 

Anna  Kidder,  '12,  Second  Vice  President 

Amy  Waite,  '13,  Treasurer 

Harriet  Judd,  '13,  Secretary 

Miss  Lucy  Sprague,  Dean  of  Women 

Miss   Lucy   Stebbins,  Assistant   Dean   of 

Women 
Dorothy  Fish,  '12,  President  of  Prytanean 
Carolin  Teichert,  '12,  President  of  Treble 

Clef 


Velma  Lewis,  '12,   President  of  Mandolin 

and  Guitar  Club 
Ada   Nielson,   '12,    President   Art    History 

Circle 
Marguerite    Creighton,    '12,    President 

Women's  Orchestra 
Edith  Pence,  '12,  Woman's  Editor  of  the 

Calif  ornian 
Grace  Hamilton,  '12,   Chairman   of  Mass 

Meeting   Committee 


295 


ORGANIZATIONS 

Big  "C"  Society 

S  ITS  members,  the  Big  "C"  Society  has  all  athletes  who,  under 
the   laws  of  the   Associated   Students,   have   the   right   to   wear 
Big  "C"s.      The  object  of  this  Society   is  the  advancement  of 
athletics    and    the    encouragement    and    development    of    inter - 
^1  collegiate  sports  among  the  students  of  the  University,  as  well 
as  the  fostering  of  harmonious  relations  between  the  University  and  outside 
athletes. 

The  Big  "C"  Society  was  organized  on  February  12,  1905,  with  a  mem- 
bership of  thirty-eight  men  in  college,  while  in  December,  191 1,  there  were 
seventy-four  Big  "C"  men  in  college. 

Whenever  representatives  of  preparatory  schools  or  other  outside  athletes 
are  present  on  the  Campus  as  guests  of  the  University,  the  Big  "C"  Society 
does  all  in  its  power  for  their  reception  and  entertainment. 

Under  the  auspices  of  the  Society  successful  relay  carnivals  have  been 
held,  as  well  as  the  Annual  Pacific  Coast  Interscholastic  Track  and  Field 
Meet,  which  brings  hundreds  of  athletes  from  different  parts  of  the  State 
to  our  Campus. 

Officers:  President,  A.  W.  Elliott,  '12,  and  H.  G.  Gabbert,  '12;  vice- 
president,  G.  A.  Kretsinger,  '11,  and  J.  U.  Calkins,  Jr.,  '11;  secretary,  H.  H. 
Wood,  '13,  and  C.  A.  Rogers,  '14;  treasurer,  R.  W.  Coane,  '13,  and  F.  H. 
Allen,  '13;  athletic  representatives  to  the  A.  S.  U.  C.  Executive  Committee, 
A.  W.  Elliott,  '12,  and  C.  A.  Allen,  '12. 


296 


ORGANIZATIONS 


Boating  Association 

The  Boating  Association  is  one  of  the  older  athletic  organizations  of 
the  University,  and  it  was  due  to  the  efforts  of  this  Association  that  rowing 
was  first  established  and  later  became  an  intercollegiate  sport. 

Two  very  successful  functions  were  held  during  the  past  year.  The 
Boating  Informal  raised  a  good  sum  of  money,  to  be  used  in  training  the 
Amador.  The  Boating  Smoker  was  a  big  rally  for  boating  and  drew  out  a 
large  crowd. 

Officers :  President,  A.  Eaton ;  vice-president,  L.  A.  Sloane ;  secretary- 
treasurer,  E.  S.  Parker.  Directors:  Rey  Maynard,  J.  R.  Northup,  O.  W. 
Young,  H.  E.  Gray,  L.  P.  Wilton,  O.  F.  Montandon 

Polydeucean  Club 

The  Polydeucean  Club  affords  its  members  an  opportunity  to  become  pro- 
ficient in  the  art  of  boxing  and  self  defense.  Its  object  is  to  instill  in  a  man 
that  self-confidence  and  self-reliance  which  comes  from  the  knowledge  that 
he  is  able  to  take  care  of  himself. 

The  Club  has  quarters  in  the  gymnasium  and  holds  meetings  semi-weekly. 
Under  the  instruction  of  Walter  Christie  the  members  make  rapid  progress, 
and  each  year  a  public  exhibition  is  held  to  stimulate  interest  in  the  work. 

Officers:  Fall  term — President,  J.  M.  Basham,  '12;  vice-president,  H.  E. 
Sandoval,  '12;  secretary-treasurer,  R.  G.  Wagenet,  '14.  Spring  term — President, 
H.  E.  Sandoval,  '12;  vice-president,  A.  Gerner,  '12;  secretary-treasurer,  A.  W. 
Paine,  '13. 

297 


ORGANIZATIONS 


THE    RIFLE    TEAM 


Rifle  Club 

This  year  has  seen  a  great  revival  of  interest  in  rifle  shooting.  Membership 
in  the  Club  has  more  than  doubled  and  the  number  of  matches  has  been  greatly 
augmented.  The  Club  has  entered  a  team  in  the  Intercollegiate  Rifle  Shooting 
League,  carried  on  under  the  auspices  of  the  National  Rifle  Association,  with 
which  the  Club  is  affiliated.  It  is  now  possible  for  members  of  the  Club  to 
secure  medals  as  sharpshooters  and  marksmen  for  proficiency  shown  on  the 
Gallery  Range. 

Last  spring,  Richard  A.  Lee,  '12,  won  the  bronze  medal  offered  by  the 
Association  for  the  highest  score  at  the  annual  shoot. 

Officers:  President,  E.  J.  Sinclair,  '13;  vice-president,  J.  T.  Fisher,  '13; 
secretary,  W.  E.  Davis,  '14;  treasurer,  G.  H.  Hagar,  '12. 


298 


ORGANIZATIONS 
Congress 

The  Students'  Congress,  dating  back  to  1868,  when  the  Durant  Literary 
Society  was  organized  in  the  old  College  of  California,  can  trace  a  continuous 
existence  of  more  than  half  a  century.  In  1894  the  Congress  took  on  its  present 
form,  after  a  combination  of  the  then  existing  societies,  the  Durant  and  the 
Neolean.  Since  1901  it  has  had  the  Senate  as  a  rival,  but  has  won  six  out  of  the 
seven  inter-society  debates  that  have  been  held.  In  the  last  year  Congress 
furnished  three  out  of  four  men  for  both  the  Intercollegiate  and  Carnot  teams. 
But  the  success  of  the  society  has  been  in  encouraging  its  own  members  to  par- 
ticipate in  frequent  formal  and  extemporaneous  discussions  of  questions  of  both 
local  and  general  interest.    . 

Officers  for  1911-12:  First  semester — Speaker,  F.  M.  Shipper,  '12;  speaker 
pro  tern,  S.  R.  Sterne,  '12;  clerk,  Hugo  Waldeck,  '13;  treasurer,  L.  S.  Black,  '12; 
executive  committee,  B.  S.  Clendenin,  '12 ;  T.  B.  Kittredge,  '12 ;  J.  W.  O'Neill,  '13 ; 
Second  semester — Speaker,  T.  B.  Kittredge,  '12;  speaker  pro  tern,  L.  E.  Goodman, 
'13;  clerk,  J.  D.  Foster,  '13;  treasurer,  E.  R.  Crabbe,  '14;  executive  committee, 
F.  M.  Shipper,  '12;  L.  S.  Black,  '12;  Hugo  Waldeck,  '13. 

Sophomore  Debating  Society 

The  Sophomore  Debating  Society  exists  for  the  purpose  of  joining  together 
those  Sophomores  interested  in  debating.  From  its  membership  the  class  team 
which  debates  with  the  Freshmen  is  chosen,  and  before  the  Society  the  tryouts 
for  the  team  are  held.  Active  work  throughout  the  year  is  largely  dispensed 
with,   with   the  exception   of   a   few   weeks   before   the   interclass   event. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were :  President,  W.  G.  Marvin ;  vice-president, 
R.  C.  Foerster ;  secretary,  A.  W.  Drury ;  treasurer,  H.  W.  Knoop. 


299 


ORGANIZATIONS 
Senate 

The  Senate  Debating  Society  has  undergone  a  decided  change  of  policy  in 
the  last  semester.  By  making  Sophomore  standing  prerequisite  to  membership 
and  by  opening  its  debates  to  the  college  public  the  Senate  has  materially  raised 
its  standard.  Its  place  among  the  undergraduate  organizations  is  of  obvious 
importance. 

Officers :  First  term — President,  J.  G.  Sweet,  '12;  vice-president,  H.  H. 
Phleger,  '12;  secretary,  A.  W.  Drury,  '14;  treasurer,  S.  Barrows,  '14.  Second 
term — President,  H.  H.  Phleger,  '12;  vice-president,  E.  F.  Sullivan,  '13;  secretary, 
G.  C.  Duque,  '14;  treasurer,  K.  L.  Blanchard,  '14. 

Members  :  Arthur  Allyn,  '13  ;  M.  J.  Bleuel,  '14;  T.  G.  Chamberlain,  '15  ;  W. 
H.  Conlin,  '12;  J.  R.  Douglas,  '13;  A.  W.  Drury,  '14;  J.  W.  Dunlop,  '15;  G.  C. 
Duque,  '14;  Paul  Fleming,  '13;  Kenyon  Green,  '15;  E.  C.  Lipman,  '14;  J.  W. 
McKinley,  '13;  W.  G.  Marvin,  '14;  W.  R.  Matthews,  '14;  J.  S.  Moore,  '14;  W.  W. 
Lovett,  '13;  R.  W.  Montandon,  '15;  H.  H.  Phleger,  '12;  J.  L.  Simpson,  '13; 
E.  K.  Sturgis,  '15;  W.  L.  Schafer,  '14;  E.  F.  Sullivan,  '13;  J.  G.  Sweet,  '12; 
W.  L.  Ware,  '15;  R.  P.  Wisecarver,  '12;  H.  N.  Wolff,  '12;  A.  H.  Conard,  '13; 
H.  L.  Heward,  '13;  S.  A.  Pleasants,  '15;  V.  H.  Gains,  '13. 


300 


ORGANIZATIONS 

Young  Men's  Christian  Association 

HE  Y.  M.  C.  A.  has  broadened  the  scope  of  its  activities  during 
the  year.  Under  the  leadership  of  B.  M.  Cherrington,  general 
secretary,  the  various  phases  of  the  work  were  carried  on.  Mission 
study  classes,  enrolling  two  hundred  men,  ran  through  the  year ; 
religious  meetings  for  all  college  men  were  held  weekly,  the  fra- 
ternity and  house  club  phase  of  Bible  study  was  successfully  developed,  interest 
in  outside  work  was  shown  by  deputation  service,  and  the  organizing  of  the  social 
service  department,  appealing  for  the  aid  of  college  men  in  social  and  religious 
work.  The  board  of  directors  has  been  reorganized  and  the  finances  established 
more  soundly,  with  Mr.  Devendorf,  financial  secretary,  in  charge. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  President,  R.  C.  McGee,  12;  vice-president, 
W.  Kerr,  '12;  corresponding  secretary,  F.  H.  Allen,  '13;  recording  secretary, 
R.  P.  Shields,  '13;  treasurer,  R.  G.  Sproul,  '13.  Committee  chairman,  E.  Vail, 
'12;  B.  S.  Clendenin,  '12;  W.  G.  Donald,  '11  ;  A.  Rushforth,  '12;  J.  D.  Foster, 
'13;  W.  G.  Marvin,  '14;  E.  L.  Shirrell,  '14. 

Young  Women's  Christian  Association 

The  purpose  of  the  Young  Women's  Christian  Association  among  the  women 
of  the  University  has  been  accomplished  during  the  year  by  emphasizing  the 
spiritual  life  and  strengthening  mutual  helpfulness  in  the  social  problems  of  the 
women.  Frequent  sound  talks  and  thoughtful  study,  followed  by  informal  teas 
and  fireside  suppers,  have  been  the  means  of  creating  an  atmosphere  of  purpose 
and  whole-souled  comradeship  on  which  the  Association  bases  its  strength. 

The  officers  for  the  year  have  been:      President,  Rachel  Miller,  '12;  vice- 
president,  Ora  Muir,   '12;  treasurer,   Katherine  Carleton,   '13;  secretary,   Fanny 
Whitman,  '14. 
treasurer,  J.  B.  Johnson. 


Freshman  Debating  Society 

An  earnest  effort  has  been  made  during  the  past  year  to  render  the 
Freshman  Debating  Society  a  really  valuable  training  school  for  the  Freshmen 
who  compete  in  the  annual  debate  with  the  Sophomores.  Meetings  have  been 
held  regularly  twice  each  month,  and  it  is  hoped  that  the  Society  has  really 
accomplished  some  good. 

The  officers  are :  First  semester — President,  R.  E.  Hoyt ;  vice-president, 
F.  Hauck;  secretary,  F.  E.  Green  ;  treasurer,  E.  S.  Thomas.  Second  semester- 
President,    F.    Hauck;   vice-president,   S.   A.   Pleasants;   secretary,   A.   Allin ; 

301 


ORGANIZATIONS 

St.  Anne's  Guild 

St.  Anne's  Guild  was  organized  seven  years  ago  for  the  purpose  of  bringing 
into  closer  relationship  all  college  women  who  are  affiliated  with  the  Episcopal 
Church.  Meetings  are  held  twice  a  month  at  the  home  of  Mrs.  C.  W.  Wells. 
Talks  are  given  by  the  members  on  topics  of  interest,  and  general  discussions 
follow,  with  occasional  outside  speakers. 

The  officers  for  the  past  year  were:  President,  Margery  Glass,  '13;  secre- 
tary, Kathleen  Dawson,  '14;  treasurer,  Helen  Moody,  '14. 


1 

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Newman  Club 

Roman  Catholic  students  of  the  University  find  the  center  and  stimulus 
of  their  spiritual  life  in  the  Newman  Club,  in  spirit  the  unifying  force  bringing 
those  students  together  in  a  common  cause. 

The  Club  has  recently  erected  a  handsome  structure  to  serve  as  its  home, 
at  the  corner  of  Ridge  Road  and  La  Loma  Avenue.  Here  there  are  cosy 
clubrooms,  cheerful  fireplaces  and  comfortable  lounging  spots.  The  building 
includes  a  chapel,  in  which  Sunday  services  are  held. 


302 


ORGANIZATIONS 


English  Club 


T   is   the   purpose   of  the    English   Club    to   provide    means    for 
the  expression  of  dramatic  and  literary  talent  in  the  University. 
At  the  present  time  this  purpose  is  fulfilled  by  the  presentation 
each  semester  of  some  great  play  and  by  the  monthly  publica- 
tion of  the  Occident  and  Pelican. 
In  its  dramatic  work  the  Club  is  aided  and  supported  by  the  Musical  and 
Dramatic  Committee  of  the  University,  with  the  result  that  English  Club  plays 
are  awaited  with  eagerness  and  remembered  with  delight. 

As  an  incentive  to  literary  work  the  Club  also  offers  a  perpetual  trophy  to 
the  writer  of  the  best  short  story  each  year. 

The  work  of  the  Club  is  carried  on  almost  entirely  by  its  various  committees, 
so  that  the  meetings,  held  every  three  weeks,  are  given  over  to  talks,  readings 
or  other  informal  entertainment. 

Since  its  inception  the  Club  has  produced  the  following  plays : 
Shakspeare,  "The  Merry  Wives  of  Windsor." 
King  Shudraka,  "The  Little  Clay  Cart." 
Ben  Jonson,  "The  Hue  and  Cry  after  Cupid." 
Shakspeare,  "The  Winter's  Tale." 
Arthur  W.  Pinero,  "The  Cabinet  Minister." 
Henry  Van  Dyke,  "The  House  of  Rimmon." 
Thomas  Dekker,  "The  Shoemaker's  Holiday." 
Stephen  Phillips,  "Nero." 
Schiller,  "Maria  Stuart." 
Stephen  Phillips,  "Paola  and  Francesca." 
Shakspeare,  "Henry  V." 


303 


ORGANIZATIONS 


College  Hall 

Woman's   Dormitory 
Officers 

FIRST  TERM  -  SECOND   TERM 

President Ida  Kriegel,  '12  Irma  Blunck,  '12 

Vice-President Sue  Davis,  '13  Elnora  Shannon,  '13 

Secretary Mary  Smith,  '14  Tene  Campbell,  '15 

Treasurer Wilhelmina  Wickenden,  '14  Alma  Pennington,  '14 

Judicial  Committee 

FIRST  TERM  SECOND   TERM 

Estelle  Tennis, '13  (chairman)  Irene  Couley,  '10 

Ida  Kruegel,  '12  Irma  Blunck,  '12 

Irene  Couley,  '10  Ida  Kriegel,  '12 

Inez  Hewitt,  '13  Jewel  Fay,  '12 

Vera  Brooke,  '11  Mary  Tawney,  '12 

Social  Committee 

first  term  second  term 

Sue  Davis,  '13  (chairman)  Elnora  Shannon,  '13 

Gladys  Baker,  '12  Brenta  Haynes,  '12 

Elnora  Shannon,  '13  Inez  Hewitt,  '13 

Kathleen  O'Brien,  '14  Beatrice  Lightner,  '14 

Tene  Campbell,  'IS  Tene  Campbell,  '15 


304 


ORGANIZATIONS 


Treble  Clef 

OFFICERS 

President   Carolin  Teichert,  '12 

Vice-President   Alice   McComb,  '13 

Secretary  Grace  Ewing,  '13 

Treasurer    Margaret  Kenny,  '13 

First  Soprano 

Josephine  Bevan,  '14  Margaret  Kenny,  '13 

Grace  Ewing,  '13  Phyllis  Maguire,  '13 

Mary  Fairchild,  '12  Leila  Nielson,  '15 

Fay  Frisbie,  '13  Emilie  Poppe,  '15 

Hazel  Guiberson,  '15  Carolin  Teichert,  '12 

Rita  Keane,  '14 

Second  Soprano 
Constance  Davis,  '13  Claudia  Massie,  '14 

Lenore  Salsig,  '13  Erna  Steindorff,  '12 

Fannie  Laird,  '14  Lois  Voswinkel,  '14 

Oneida  Madison,  '15  Willa  Yolland,  '15 

First  Alto 

Florence  Andruss,  '15  Helen  Schweitzer,  '12 

Emma  Black,  '13  Dorothy  Wilkinson,  '13 

Alice  McComb,  '13  Cecelia  Ulrich,  '14 

Second  Alto 
Marion  Gay,  '12  Myrtle  Maxwell,  '12 


306 


ORGANIZATIONS 
Women's  Mandolin  and  Guitar  Club 

OFFICERS 

Director Richard    J.    Carpenter 

President Velm a    Lewis,  '12 

Vice-President Elaine    Standish,  '12 

Secretary Gertrude    Comfort,  '13 

Treasurer Mary    Mulvaney,  '13 


goldie  hulin,  '14 
Elaine  Standish,  '12 
Ellen   Ord,  '12 
Minnie  Walton,  '13 


MEMBERS 

First  Mandolins 

Esther  Starkweather,  '12 


Mary  Mulvaney,  '13 
Theresa   Harrison,  '12 
Daisy  Monroe,  '13 


Second  Mandolins 


Ruth  Ruddock,  '13 
Elizabeth  Boynton,  '14 
Mabel  Lockhart,  '12 
Elzaida   Hansen,  '14 


Mary   Bogue,   '13 
Alma  Honeggar,  '13 
Arline  Baugh,  '14 
Ethel  McConnell,  '12 


Velma  Lewis,  '12 
Gertrude  Comfort,  '13 
Elizabeth  Worthen,  '12 


Guitars 


Jane  Davidson,  '13 
Estelle  Ruddock,  '15 
Leila  Neilson,  '15 


Violincello 

Dorothy  Yates,  '15 


308 


ORGANIZATIONS 


University  of  California  Glee  Club 


OFFICERS 

First  Term 

President     F.    S.    Peterson,    '12 

Vice-President     T.   A.    Stroud,    '12 

Secretary    C.   A.   Pitchford,    '14 

Manager     F.   G.   Linde,   '13 

Director     Clinton   R.   Morse,  '96 


Second  Term 

E.  M.   Einstein,   '12 
S.    L.   Arnot,    '13 

C.    A.    Pitchford,    '14 

F.  G.   Steward,   'IS 
Clinton    R.    Morse,   '96 


MEMBERS 


L.   W.    Allen,   '12 

J.   Hunt,    '15 

G.   Judd,   '15 

G.   D.   MacDonald,  '15 

E.    F.    Parrish,    '15 

L.    E.    Rushton,    '14 


S.  L.   Arnot,    '13 

I.  Davis,    '15 

A.  Elliott,  '12 

S.  Harding,    '14 

A.  W.   Haslam,    '13 

A.  W.    Heen,    '13 

H.  ITlGBY,     '15 

W.    B.   Le  Hane,   '15 


L.    B.    Bailey,    '15 
A.   C.   Dickel,   '13 
M.    J.    Dillman,    '12 
S.   L.  Harris,   '15 
F.    G.    Linde,    '13 
R.    M.    Neily,    '13 


M.    L.    Cohn,    '13 

G.  Crowe,    '13 

E.  W.    Dutton,    '13 

E.  M.    Einstein,   '12 

A.  C.    Felt,    '14 

R.  Grinstead,   '10 

T.  C.    Haley,    '15 


First  Tenor 


H.   Wolff,  '12 

Second  Tenor 


First  Bass 


Second  Bass 


R.    M.   Tapscott,    '15 


R.   W.    Rust,   '13 
C.  N.  Smith,  '12 
J.   A.   Stroud,  '13 
L.    Stroud,    '15 
J.    F.    Thomas,    '15 
G.  Willoughby,  '12 


A.  B.  Martin,  '15 
F.    N.    Murphy,    '12 
J.    A.    Owen,    '13 
S.    B.    Peart,    '13 
C.    A.    Pitchford,    '14 
A.  C.  Saxe,  '11 
W.  P.   Stanton,  '12 
II.    B.    Webster,    '13 


F.    S.    Peterson,    '12 
J.  E.  Squires,  '15 
F.   G.   Steward,   '15 
H.    P.    Williams,    '14 
S.   N.   Wyckoff,   '14 
R.   Yelland,   '15 


C.  Herriott,  '13 
L.  P.  Hunt,  '14 
H.    L.   Jensen,    '12 
R.  Knight,  '13 
E.   J.   Lange,    '13 
R.   S.    Maile,    '13 
M.  C.  Nathan,  '14 


310 


ORGANIZATIONS 
University  Orchestra 

Conductor Mr.   Steindorff 

President Professor   Scholz 

Vice-President L.    W.    Allen,  '12 

Secretary-Treasurer H.  P.  Nachtrieb,  '14 

First  Violins 
J.  H.  Todd/Jr.,  'IS  M.  McDonough,  '13         O.  R.  Smith,  13 

F.  B.  Hornick,  '14  P.  Lowenthal,  '13  M.  L.  Brenner,  '13 

R.  H.  Hills,  Jr.,  '15       H.  P.  Hare,  '13  Z.  Pietrzck,  '15 

J.  D.  Cohn,  '13 

Second  Violins 

K.  Steindorff,  '14  S.  H.  Fountaine,  '15      A.  A.  Jungerman,  '14 

S.  L.  Quimby,  '15  O.  J.  Bergman,  '15  L.  E.  Fleming,  '14 

W.  R.  Catching,  '15       V.  B.  Anderson,  '13        J.  H.  Popkens,  '13 
S.  G.  de  Mahy,  T4         L.  Taussig,  '15 

'Cellos 
H.  P.  Nachtrieb,  '14       C.  S.  Mauzy,  15  G.  Morgan,  '15 

A.  Huber,  '12  C.  Reed,  '13  E.  Zeitfuchs,  '12 

Bass 

G  H.  Briggs,  '14 

Oboe 

F.  H.  Bosbyshell,  '15 

Cornets 

H.  H.  Wood,  '13  E.  N.  Arnot,  '13  G.  W.  Thanen,  '15 

A.  W.  Christie,  '15         A.  D.  Ellis,  '13  J.  V.  Baldwin,  '15 

Flutes 

O.  Goldman,  '12  A.  C.  Felt,  '14  F  Gross,  '15 

E.  H.  Wilson,  '15  J.  B.  Frisbie,  '15  C.  B.  Castle,  '15 

Horns  Clarinets  Melophone 

L.  A.  C.  Waite,  '15  P.  B.  Taylor,  '13  L.  D.  Watkins,  '15 

W.  D.  Horner,  '13  H.  E.  Kaiser,  '15 

Piano 

E.  W.  Unangst,  '15 

Trombones 

H.  C.  Beebe,  '15  E.  M.  Wright,  '13  H.  W.  Cochran,  '14 

H.  A.  Mallum,  '15 


312 


ORGANIZATIONS 


University  Cadet  Band 

Commissioned  Officers 

Chief  Musician L.  W.  Allen,  '12 

Principal  Musician C.  A.  Allen,  '12 

Drum  Major R.   G.   Sproul,  '13 

Non-Commissioned  Officers 

E.  W.  Dutton,  '13  C.  A.  Harwell,  '14 

M.  L.  Cohn,  '13  G.  H.  Briggs,  '14 

E.  M.  Wright,  '13  W.  H.  Dunn,  '14 

J.  Pavliger,  '13  C.  Stock,  '14 

M.  Young,  '12  H.  W.  Cochran,  '14 

C.  C.  Way,  '13  H.  H.  Wood,  '13 

Privates 

E.  J.  Albrecht  E.-R.  Lasell 

E.  N.  Arnot  H.  L.  Mallum 

V.  S.  Brown  G.  H.  Martin 

W.  Bigelow  R.  Mathew 

J.  C.  Campbell  E.  R.  Merritt 

C.  B.  Castle  L.  W.  Meyer 

M.  H.  Childress  G.  Morgan 

H.  H.  Coolidge  L.  Newfield 


Band 


R.  I.  Daley 
L.  E.  Fleming 
L.  W.  Fowler 
C  D.  Hart 
R.  R.  Holeman 


S.  S.  Parker 
A.  L.  Parmelee 
L.  A.  Waite 
R  M.  Yelland 
H.  E.  Kaiser 


T.  D.  Cooper 
R.  E.  Gunn 
L.   H.   Moore 
L.  S.  Rathbone 


Trumpeters 


C.  Z.  Sutton 
E.  Young 
A.  McLaughlin 
R.  B.  Morin 


314 


ORGANIZATIONS 


■ 

' '  i-  ■   ■ 

_    ^~     J=^5^BBga 

Mandolin  Club 

OFFICERS 

President H.   S.  Chase,  '12 

Vice-President A.    V.    Turner,  '13 

Secretary H.    G.    Adams,  '12 

Associate  Council S.  H.  Day,  '10 

Director R   J.   Hill,  '13 

First  Mandolins 
R.  J.  Hill/  13  H.  B.  Mills,  '14 

R.  L.  Shurtleff,  '12  Kenneth  Monteagle,  '14 

E.  R  Dickover,  '12  E.  W.  Taylor,  '12 

C.  A.  Anderson,  '12 

Second  Mandolins 
H.  S.  Chase,  '12  L.  A.  Eggleston,  '14 

H.  G.  Adams,  '12  R  G.  Graham,  '12 

R.  R  Randall,  '13  I.  B.  McDaniel    '15 

J.  E.  Gardiner,  '13  G.  B.  Caswell,  '15 

Guitars 

S.  H.  Day,  '10  R.  M.  Gidney,  '12 

F.  T.  Henshaw,  '15  Kenneth  Carey,  '15 

A.  V.  Turner,  '13 

Mandola 

S.  F.  Bryan,  '13 

'Cello  Drum 

H.  P.  Nachtrieb,  '14  V.  S.  Brown,  '14 

316 


ORGANIZATIONS 

Architectural  Association 

IXCE  its  organization  in  November,  1905,  the  Association  has 
always  had  in  view  the  advancement  of  its  members  and  the 
improvement  of  the  Department  of  Architecture.  A  number  of 
informal  talks  by  prominent  men  of  the  profession  are  given 
each  semester.     These  take  the  form  of  social  gathering?  as  well 

as  lectures. 

The  "Annual  Exhibition  and  Jinks"  is  held  in  January,  and  is  always  well 

attended  by  an  interested  public,  the  work  of  the  year  being  exhibited  at 

that  time. 

The  Year  Book,  published  for  the  first  time  in  April,  and  containing  all 

the  best  work  of  the  department,  marks  a  great  step  forward,  and  will  give 

California  a  much  higher  standing  among  the  other  architectural  schools. 

The  officers  for  the  year  have  been:     President,  A.  J.  Evers,  '11,  and 

J.  H.  Mitchell,  '12;  vice-president,  Grace  Weeks,  '12,  and  Gertrude  Comfort, 

'13;   secretary,   Doris   Spencer,   '12,   and   Margaret   Locan,   '13;  treasurer,   L. 

Jory,  '12,  and  W.  J.  Graham,  '12;  massier,  W.  J.  Graham,  '12,  and  Charles 

Claudius,  '12. 


AN    OFFICE    BUILDING 


(Courtesy  of  Architectural  Year  Book) 


317 


ORGANIZATIONS 

El  Circulo  Hispanico 

El  Circulo  Hispanico  was  founded  in  1903  to  give  the  students  of  the 
University  an  opportunity  to  use  Spanish.  This  end  has  been  sought  by  fort- 
nightly meetings,  often  of  a  purely  social  nature,  and  often  to  hear  an  address 
in  Spanish.  Once,  sometimes  twice,  each  year  the  society  presents  a  Spanish 
play. 

Officers:  Presidente,  T.  F.  Lopez;  vice-presidente,  Vera  LaRue  Sturges, 
'12;  secretaria,  Mrs.  Beatrice  Cornish. 

German  Clubs 

ORTNIGHTLY  meetings  have  been  held  throughout  the 
semester  by  the  different  clubs  under  the  German  Department, 
but  no  dramatic  productions  were  undertaken  last  fall.  The 
|>  Dramatic  Circle  was  organized  for  the  first  time  this  year,  in 
connection  with  the  Deutscher  Verein,  which  is  the  honor 
society  of  the  department.  Four  plays  will  be  presented  before  the  Verein 
during  the  spring  semester,  in  preparation  for  a  play  in  the  Greek  Theatre, 
to  be, produced  next  fall.  The  supervision  of  this  work  is  in  the  hands  of  the 
Dramatic  Circle. 

DEUTSCHER  VEREIN 

President Professor  Schilling 

Vice-president Elda  Eggert,  Tl 

Secretary Harriet  Ehrenberg,  '12 

Treasurer W.  G.  Frederickson,  '12 

SPRECHVERBAND 

President W.  J.  Aschenbrenner,  '12 

Secretary C.  H.  Bruns,  '14 

Treasurer Signe  E.  Soderberg,  '12 

DRAMATIC  CIRCLE 

President Professor  Demeter 

Vice-president Clotilde  Grunsky,  '14 

Secretary W.  G.  Frederickson,  '12 

KONVERSATIONSKLUB 

President W.  G.  Frederickson,  T2 

Vice-president Hazel  Malcolm,  '13 ;  Mildred  Lincoln,  '14 

Secretary-treasurer Kurt  Steindorff,  '14 

PLAUDERTASCHE 

President Edith  Pence,  '12 

Vice-president .    Clotilde  Grunsky,  '14 

Secretary Ethel  James, '11 

Treasurer W.  E.  Chamberlain,  '13 

DAS  DEUTSCHE  KRAENZCHEN 

President Fred  Goldman,  '12 

Vice-president Grace  Gallagher,  '14 

Secretary F.  C.  Allen, '15 

Treasurer Frederick  Gross,  '15 

318 


ORGANIZATIONS 

Law  Association 

The  Law  Association  is  a  body  composed  of  all  the  students  enrolled  in  the 
Department  of  Law.  Its  purpose  is  to  foster  the  best  interests  of  the  University 
by  providing  for  organized  work  on  the  part  of  the  students.  To  the  Association 
is  given  the  control  of  Boalt  Hall,  and  a  board  of  governors  is  appointed  each 
year  to  enforce  regulations  concerning  the  use  of  the  building. 

The  members  of  the  board  are :  S.  H.  Day,  chairman ;  G.  A.  Work  and  T.  B. 
Kittredge. 

The  most  important  work  before  the  Law  Association  at  present  is  the  matter 
of  publishing  a  Law  Review.  With  the  earnest  co-operation  of  the  faculty  the 
work  is  well  under  way  and  publication  is  expected  in  the  near  future. 

The  officers  for  the  current  year — August,  191 1,  to  May,  1912 — are:  Presi- 
dent, W.  W.  Kergan,  '11;  vice-president,  J.  U.  Calkins,  Jr.,  '11;  secretary, 
Brand, '10;  treasurer,  W.  K.  Powell,  '11. 


John  Marshall  Law  Club 

The  John  Marshall  Law  Club  was  organized  in  1901  for  the  purpose  of  giving 
the  students  in  the  professional  law  course  practice  in  discussing  and  handling 
moot  cases.  The  Club  membership  is  limited  to  twenty  men  of  the  department, 
who  hold  fortnightly  meetings,  thereby  giving  each  member  ample  opportunity 
for  practice.  At  intervals  mock  trials  are  held  in  conjunction  with  the  Sword 
and  Scales,  a  member  of  the  faculty  presiding. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  Chancellor,  W.  H.  Pillsbury,  '09;  clerk, 
T.  C.  Wisecarver,  '10;  bailiff,  G.  A.  Work,  '11. 


319 


ORGANIZATIONS 


CT.no<MO  Uifhtn — • 


Commerce  Club 

The  Commerce  Club  is  organized  for  the  purpose  of  giving  to  its  members 
an  insight  into  the  practical  as  well  as  the  theoretical  side  of  business  life.  This 
is  largely  accomplished  by  occasional  trips  to  various  manufacturing  and  in- 
dustrial plants  about  the  bay.  All  the  members  of  the  Club  are  allowed  to  make 
these  trips  and  acquaint  themselves  with  the  business  methods  employed  by  the 
establishments  visited.  Near  the  end  of  each  year  the  Club  holds  a  banquet 
at  which  the  past  achievements  and  future  plans  are  discussed,  and  general  good 
fellowship  is  the  order  of  the  day. 

The  officers  for  the  year  are:  First  term — President,  E.  A.  Fisher,  '12; 
vice-president,  W.  H.  Conlin,  '12;  secretary-treasurer,  F.  C.  Nelson,  '13.  Second 
term — President,  K.  C.  Mohrhardt,  '12;  vice-president,  L.  L.  Hyde,  '12; 
secretary-treasurer,  G.  N.  Keyston,  '13. 

320 


ORGANIZATIONS 
Economics  Club 

The  Economics  Club  is  the  honor  society  of  the  College  of  Commerce,  choos- 
ing ten  of  its  members  each  year  from  the  Senior  and  five  from  the  Junior  Class. 
The  active  members,  together  with  the  graduate  and  faculty  members,  meet  bi- 
weekly, at  the  home  of  one  of  the  professors  or  students.  Here  the  opportunity 
is  afforded  to  hear  talks  by  leading  business  men  on  economics  and  political 
subjects.  The  real  purpose  of  the  club  is  deeper  study  of  the  economic,  political 
and  social  problems  of  the  day. 

Officers:  President,  E.  D.  McNear,  '12;  vice-president,  W.  P.  Tufts,  '12; 
secretary  and  treasurer,  E.  A.  Fisher,  '12. 


AGRICULTURE    STUDENTS    ON    LABOR    DAY 


Agricultural  Club 

The  Agricultural  Club  is  the  organization  representing  the  largest  of  the 
professional  colleges.  Unlike  most  of  the  other  college  clubs  it  admits  lower 
classmen  to  membership  and  may  be  regarded  as  a  student-body  organization  of 
the  Agricultural  College.  The  activities  of  the  club  include  frequent  talks  by 
prominent  men  and  trips  to  points  of  interest.  This  semester  the  club  is  operating 
an  employment  bureau  to  secure  summer  work  along  agricultural  lines  for  its 
members. 

Officers:  First  term — President,  Donald  Graham,  '12;  vice-president,  C.  R. 
Johnston,  '12;  secretary,  D.  E.  Alvord,  '13;  treasurer,  R.  L.  Guy,  '13;  sergeant- 
at-arms,  N.  S.  Mickel,  '12.  Second  term — President,  W.  H.  Nixon,  '12;  vice- 
president,  James  V.  Short,  '13;  secretary,  G.  D.  Kennedy,  '12;  treasurer, 
E.  O.  Amundsen,  '12;   sergeant-at-arms,  G.  P.  Dozier,  '12. 

321 


ORGANIZATIONS 


Mining  Association 

Since  its  organization  in  1902,  the  Mining  Association  has  been  very 
progressive.  Its  library  has  more  than  doubled  in  size  during  the  past  year. 
The  latest  books  pertaining  to  the  profession  and  the  best  engineering  jour- 
nals are  to  be  found  on  its  tables.  Meetings  are  now  held  semi-monthly, 
at  which  engineering  problems  are  discussed.  Frequent  lectures  are  given 
during  the  year  to  acquaint  members  with  engineers  in  the  field.  Once 
each  semester  an  informal  banquet  is  given,  to  which  members  of  the  faculty 
are  invited.  Trips  of  inspection  are  also  made  to  manufacturing  and  metal- 
lurgical plants  about  the  bay. 

Officers:  First  term — President,  N.  J.  Lund,  '11;  vice-president,  J.  M. 
Basham,  '12;  secretary,  E.  D.  Barnett,  '12;  treasurer,  C.  C.  Rae,  '12;  librarian, 
F.  L.  Wilson,  '12;  sergeant-at-arms,  J.  R.  Suman,  '12.  Second  term — Presi- 
dent, F.  L.  Wilson,  '12;  vice-president,  S.  B.  Davis,  '12;  secretary,  S.  L.  Arnot, 
'13;  treasurer,  C.  A.  Allen,  '12;  librarian,  E.  H.  Clausen,  '13;  sergeant-at-arms, 
A.  P.  Cortelyou,  '13. 

Associated  Electrical  and  Mechanical  Engineers 

The  work  of  the  Associated  Electrical  and  Mechanical  Engineers  occupies 
a  wide  field  of  usefulness  in  the  colleges  of  Electrical  and  Mechanical  Engineering. 
Since  its  foundation  in  the  fall  of  1902  it  has  maintained  an  ever  growing  library 
of  engineering  literature.  Addresses  by  professional  men  are  frequently  ar- 
ranged. 

Officers:  First  term — President,  L.  S.  Ready,  '12;  vice-president,  A.  V. 
Guillou,  '12;  secretary,  W.  S.  Van  Winkle,  '12;  treasurer,  J.  F.  Pollard,  '12; 
librarian,  J.  P.  Zipf,  '12;  executive  committee,  S.  Malatesta,  '12;  H.  E.  Sandoval, 
'12.  Second  term — President,  J.  F.  Pollard,  '12;  vice-president,  J.  A.  Arnott,  '12; 
secretary,  C.  I.  Kephart,  '13;  treasurer,  E.  T.  Kavanagh,  '13;  librarian,  J.  P.  Zipf; 
'12;  executive  committee,  L.  S.  Ready,  '12,  and  B.  D.  Dexter,  '12. 

322 


ORGANIZATIONS 

American  Institute  of  Electrical  Engineers 

Upon  the  petition  of  ten  seniors  in  the  College  of  Electrical  Engineering 
a  charter  was  granted  for  the  formation  of  a  student  branch  of  the  American 
Institute  of  Electrical  Engineers.  Since  its  foundation  the  society  has  been 
thriving,  its  members  are  elected  from  the  best  students  in  the  College  of 
Mechanics.  Its  meetings  are  held  every  two  weeks,  for  the  discussion  of 
papers  on  electrical  subjects  by  the  students  and  by  members  of  the  Faculty, 
who  have  shown  a  great  interest  in  the  welfare  of  the  branch. 

The  officers  are:  Chairman,  J.  F.  Pollard,  '12;  vice-chairman,  L.  S. 
Ready,  '12;  secretary,  B.  D.  Dexter,  '12,  and  treasurer,  A.  F.  Bridge,  '12. 

American  Society  of  Mechanical  Engineers 

In  December,  191 1,  the  mechanical  engineering  students  of  the  University 
applied  for  membership  in  the  American  Society  of  Mechanical  Engineers. 
The  application  was  granted  and  with  the  opening  of  the  spring  term  a 
Student  Branch  of  the  national  organization,  similar  to  those  existing  in 
many  of  the  Eastern  universities,  was  established.  The  members  are  elected 
semi-annually  from  the  Senior  and  Junior  Classes  in  the  College  of  Mechanical 
Engineering. 

The  object  of  these  student  branches  is  to  hold  fortnightly  meetings, 
at  which  papers  are  read  on  various  mechanical  subjects. 

The  officers  for  the  spring  term  were:  Chairman,  E.  O.  Sandman,  '12; 
vice-chairman,  R.  H.  Cooley,  '12;  secretary,  E.  W.  Taylor,  '12,  and  treasurer, 
G.  M.  Simonson,  '12. 


323 


ORGANIZATIONS 


Civil  Engineering  Association 

HE  Civil  Engineering  Association,  composed  of  all  upper  class- 
men in  the  college,  is  now  in  its  tenth  year,  and,  due  to  the 
spirit  of  co-operation  existing  between  its  members  and  the 
faculty,  has  been  continually  growing  in  its  usefulness.  Monthly 
business  meetings  are  held,  instructive  trips  are  taken  to  en- 
gineering works  about  the  bay,  and  at  special  lectures  the  Association  is 
addressed  by  men  prominent  in  the  profession.  Semi-annually  all  gather  at 
an  informal  banquet.  The  library,  one  of  the  features  of  the  Association, 
contains  the  best  engineering  books  and  periodicals,  and  thus  enables  the 
students  to  keep  in  touch  with  engineering  work  all  over  the  world. 

The  officers  for  the  two  semesters  have  been :  President,  E.  A.  Ingham, 
'12,  and  W.  H.  Smyth,  '12;  vice-president,  J.  S.  Halbert,  '12,  and  W.  H. 
Jaenicke,  '13;  secretary,  E.  N.  Murphy,  '12,  and  C.  D.  Y.  Ostrom,  '11; 
treasurer,  F.  A.  Roller,  '12,  and  J.  H.  Thomson,  '11;  sergeant-at-arms,  G.  A. 
Baboyan,  '12,  and  J.  A.  Dias,  '11. 


CIVIL    ENGINEERS    ON    LAT.OR    DAY 


Chemistry  Fiends 

The  Society  of  Chemistry  Fiends  is  an  organization  of  the  women  of  the 
three  upper  classes  who  are  interested  in  chemistry,  and  who  are  working  in  the 
laboratories  of  the  University  on  the  various  phases  of  this  subject. 

Officers:  Arch  fiend,  Alice  F.  Morse,  '12;  scribe,  Mabel  F.  Jones,  '13;  custo- 
dian of  the  coffee  pot,  Ethel  B.  Lockhart,  '12;  mother  fiend,  Mrs.  Edward  Booth. 


324 


ORGANIZATIONS 

League  of  the  Republic 

The  League  of  the  Republic  was  organized  in  1907,  at  the  instance  of  Pro- 
fessor G.  H.  Boke  of  the  Law  Department.  The  exposure  of  the  civic  de- 
bauchery of  San  Francisco  was  the  immediate  incentive  in  its  formation,  for 
Professor  Boke  believed  that  in  the  active  interest  of  college  men  in  politics  lay 
the  only  salvation  of  democracy.  The  slogan  of  the  League  has  always  been 
that  "the  college  man,  educated  at  the  expense  of  the  State,  owes  to  that  State 
an  active  civic  interest,"  and  its  aim  has  been  to  create  that  interest.  This  year 
the  League  has  secured  the  introduction  into  the  University  curriculum  of  a 
course  of  public  lectures  upon  important  political  topics.  The  organization  is 
affiliated  with  the  Intercollegiate  Civic  League. 

Officers:  Fall — President,  G.  D.  Wimp,  '12;  vice-president,  M.  C.  BaerT 
'12;  secretary,  H.  E.  Stocker,  '12;  treasurer,  J.  E.  Hanna,  '14;  executive  com- 
mittee, W.  W.  Beatty,  '13,  chairman;  H.  M.  Albright,  '12;  T.  C.  Wisecarver, 
'11.  Spring — President,  G.  D.  Wimp,  '12;  vice-president,  M.  C.  Baer,  '12; 
secretary,  H.  E.  Stocker,  '12;  treasurer,  B.  Coleman,  '13.;  executive  com- 
mittee, W.  W.  Beatty,  '13,  chairman;  H.  M.  Albright,  '12;  R.  G.  Sproul,  '13. 

Chess  Club 

Having  so  decisively  defeated  Stanford  in  the  last  match  in  191 1,  by  the 
score  of  6  to  1,  the  chess  enthusiasts  were  optimistic  for  a  similar  victory  in 
1912.  This  victory  came,  California  defeating  Stanford,  seven  games  to  none. 
Last  spring  the  annual  tournament  for  the  University  championship  and  the 
Shreve  perpetual  cup  was  won  by  E.  W.  Gruer,  '12,  C.  F.  Woods  being  second. 

The  chess  committee  has  been  composed  of  E.  W.  Gruer,  '12,  chairman; 
A.  Epstein,  '13,  and  E.  H.  Trout,  '13. 

Art  History  Circle 

The  Art  History  Circle  was  organized  in  the  spring  of  1903  by  Mrs.  Ruliff 
S.  Holway.  The  membership  of  the  club  is  limited  to  women  students  of  the 
University  who  wish  to  study  the  history  of  art.  Last  year  the  meetings  were 
devoted  to  a  study  of  California  artists.  Part  of  the  material  for  this  work  came 
from  the  State  Library  in  Sacramento.  At  each  meeting  reports  are  made  by 
members  of  the  club. 

The  officers  for  the  year  have  been:  President,  Ada  Nielson,  '14;  secretary- 
treasurer,  Bessie  Thornberg,  '14. 


325 


Jfraternal  (^rgamjationg 


SORORITIES 


SORORITIES 


Kappa  Alpha  Theta 

Founded  at  De  Pauw  University  in  1870 
Omega   Chapter — Estabished    in    1890 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Ellen   S.   Stadtmuller 

Graduate 

Doris  Foote 


Class  of  1912 


Alice  Katherine  Earl 
Martha  Ford  Earl 
Muriel  Estelle  Burn  ham 
Edith  Dwight  Clapp 
May  Bensel  Chase 


Elsa  Schilling 
Lillian  Van  Dyke 
Agnes  Ballard  Welsh 
Katherine  Priscilla  McElrath 
Jessie  Helen  Runyon 


Eva  Nordwell 

Class  of  1913 

Pauline  Hayes  Pierson  Harriet  Steward  Judd 

Carolyn  Waite  Constance  Davis 

Helen  Marguerite  Parr  Dorothy  Wilkinson 

Class  of  1914 

Helen  Gardner  Waterman  Clotilde  Grunsky 

Elizabeth  Alward  Eames  Dorothea  White 

Hermine  Henze 


Class  of  1915 


Dorothy  Rieber 
Dorothy  Edinger 
Irene  Frances  Stratton 
Elizabeth  Page 
Leslie  Wilde 
Dorothy  Reynolds 


Belle  Hechtman 
Mildred  Edwards  Pierson 
Elizabeth  Schilling 
Gertrude  Adams 
Catherine  Mott 
Constance  Gary  Moore 


328 


Helen   Runyon        Agnes   Welsh  Muriel    Burnham    Elsa    Schilling         Doris    Foote  Alice   Earl 

Lillian   Van   Dyke    Katherine  McElrath    Edith    Clapp  Martha     Earl  Carolyn    Waite 

Harriet    Judd  May    Chase  Marguerite    Parr    Eva    Nordwell         Clotilde    Grunsky   Dorothea    White 

Constance    Davis    Dorothy    Wilkinson       Elizabeth     Eames    Pauline   Pierson     Constance    Moore 

Irene    Stratton        Helen  Waterman    Leslie    Wilde  Dorothy  Richer        Relle    Hechtman     Katherine    De    Motte 

Dorothy    Edinger   Elizabeth   Page       Mildred   Pierson     Elizabeth  Schilling     Gertrude   Adams 

329 


SORORITIES 


Gamma  Phi  Beta 

Founded  at  the  University  of  Syracuse  in   1874 
Eta  Chapter — Established  in  1894 

MEMBERS 
Faculty 

Margaret  Henderson 

Graduate 
Kate  McGraw 

Class  of  1912 
Ora  Emily  Muir  Alice  Lorraine  Andrews 

May  Atkinson  Penelope  Murdoch 

Eleanor  Caroline  French  Josephine  LeConte 

Carmelita  Woerner  Ellen  Frances  Ord 

Class  of  1913 

Margaret  Trabue  Hodgen  Gertrude  Elliott 

Louelle  Jackson  Katherine  Philleo 

Ruth  Seely  Genung  Gertrude  Elizabeth  Comfort 

Susanna  Kirk  Davis  *Dorothy  Brown 

Class  of  1914 
Winifred  Bridge  Eva  Lurita  Stone 

Genevieve  Atkinson  Thoda  Stancliffe  Cockroft 

*Pauline  Hansford  Davis  Harriet  Pasmore 

Ina  Ambury  Haile 


Class  of  1915 


Margaret  Lowell  Garthwaite 

Luzina  Denio 

Emily  Forbes  Stewart 

Imogene  Mason 

Dora  Benner  Atwater 


Marian  Nowell 
Elizabeth  Hoyt 
Grace  Elvira  Partridge 
Dorothy  Daniels 
Ethel  Nowell 


"Absent  on  leave. 


330 


Kate   McGraw  May    Atkinson  Lorraine  Andrews        Josephine   Le   Conte 

C'armelita    Woerner      Ora  Muir  Ruth    Genung  Susanna   Davis 

Eleanor   French  Penelope   Murdoch        Louelle  Jackson  Gertrude   Elliott  Margaret  Hodgen 

Gertrude    Comfort        Katherine    Philleo         Lurita   Stone  Harriet  Pasmore  Pauline    Davis 

Genevieve   Atkinson     Thoda  Cockroft  Winifred   Bridge  Elizabeth    Hoyt 

Ina  Haile  Luzina    Denio  Margaret  Garthwaite  Emily    Stewart 


331 


SORORITIES 


Kappa  Kappa  Gamma 

Founded  at   Monmouth   College  in   1870 
Pi  Chapter— Established  in  1880—  Re-established  in   1897 

MEMBERS 


Graduate 


Margaret  Griffiths 


Leila   McKibben 


Class  of  1912 
Helen  Gould  Weston  Marion  Gay 

***Margaret  Frances   Witter         Caroline   {Catherine  Teichert 
May  Genevieve  Van  Maren        Mildred  Etta  Porter 
Marianne  Glasgow   Brown 

Class  of  1913 

Marjory  Gardiner  Anita  Margaret  Crellin 

Myrtle  Lenore   Salsig  Mabel  Maud  Cowell 

Georgia  Adelaide  Wiseman 


Lois  Voswinkel 
Beatrice  Evelyn  Mesmer 
Marguerite  A  moss 
Ruth    Griffiths 
Mildred  Lucille  Wickson 


Class  of  1914 

Camille  Bowie  Adams 
Lillian  Barnard 
Helen   Gertrude  Bannan 
Elva   Ree   Christie 
Winifred  Cornell  Jewett 


Dorothy  Malbon  Parker 


**Isabelle  Culver 


Class  of  1915 
Ruth  Sherman  Mabel  Evelyn    Bontz 

Mabel  Johanna  Moller  Louise  Edna  Lockwood 

Edith   Eleanor  Goodfellow        Louise  Eliza  Roberts 
Mildred  Knox  Katherine  Crellin 


** 'Affiliated. 

332 


**  Graduated    December,    1911. 


Carolin   Teichert 
Ruth   Griffith 
Mabel   Cowell 
Isabelle     Culver 
Winifred  Jewett 

Mabel    Moller 


Helen    Weston 
Lillian    Barnard 
Lucille    Wickson 
Ruth    Sherman 
Elva    Christie 


Margaret  Witter 
Marjory  Gardiner 
Helen    Bannan 
Beatrice    Mesmer 
Mildred   Knox 


Louise  Lockwood 


Edith   Goodfellow 


Marianne    Brown 
Anita   Crellin 
Lois   Voswinkel 
Marguerite  Amoss 
Georgia   Wiseman 


May  Van   Maren 
Marion    Gay 
Lenore  Salsig 
Camille    Adams 
Mabel  Bontz 


Louise   Roberts 


333 


SORORITIES 


Delta  Delta  Delta 

Founded  at   Boston   University   in    1888 
Pi  Chapter— Established  in   1900 

MEMBERS 
Graduate 


Marguerite  Ogden 


Bertha  Bartlett 


Class  of  1912 
Helen  Lowell  Beckwith  Guglielma  Roeth 

Harriet  Martha  Ehrenberg        Isabel  Emma  Fowler 
Anna  Rodman  Kidder 

Class  of  1913 
Irma  Foveaux  Margaret   Bixby   Locan 

Muriel  Trull  Florence  Louise  Wheeler 

Class  of  1914 
Marianne  Hazel  Bell  Edith  Frisbie 

Mildred    Marguerite    Druhe 
Edith  Frances   McNab 
Helen  Jean  Frisbie 
Juanita  Alice  Kyburg 


Helen  Alice  Young 
Anna  Lee   Hopkins 
Jessie  Winifred  Harris 
Rosalie  Laura  Ogden 


Elizabeth  Herriott  Morrison 

Class  of  1915 

Janet  Hood  Bern  ice  Olney 

Edith  Elizabeth  Locan  Alta  Hazel  Guiberson 

Marion  Wilcox  Ramona  Lorraine  Guiberson 

ysabel  forker 


334 


Harriet   Ehrenberg       Anna    Kidder  Marguerite  Ogden         Isabel    Fowler 

Helen    Beckwith  Muriel   Trull  Margaret  Locan  Florence    Wheeler         Irma   Foveaux 

Edith    McNab  Rosalie   Ogden  Marianne  Hell  Elizabeth    Morrison      Guglielma    Roeth 

Mildred   Druhe  Helen   Frisbie  Jessie  Harris  Anna   Hopkins  Marion   Wilcox 

Helen   Young  Ramona   Guiberson       Hazel   Guiberson  Edith    Locan 

Juanita    Kyburg  Bernice    Olney  Janet   Hood  Ysabel   Forker 


335 


SORORITIES 


Pi  Beta  Phi 

Founded  at   Monmouth   College   in    1867 
California  Beta  Chapter — Established  in  1900 

MEMBERS 
Graduate 


Elsie  Ahrens 


Georgie  Dell  McCoy 


Class  of  1912 
**Anna  Melrose  Browning  **Louise  Perkins 

Gladys  Marie  Perkins  Ethel  Robinson 

Alice  May  Hiestand  Gladys  Marie  Lewis 

Class  of  1913 
Ada  Cline  Florence  Rose  McCoy 

*Frances  Marguerite  Thomas       Grace  Ewing 

Grace  Garrigue 

Class  of  1914 
Alice  McCoy  Hazel  Alma  Orr 

Helen  Jane  Dabney  Anita  Truman 

Hazel  Annice  Ingels  **Hazel  Chase 

Emily  Serena  Maddux  Anita  Gallager 

Norma  Umphred 

Class  of  1915 

Lurline  Browning  Engelena  Ward 

Lucie  Dorothy  Altona  Helen  Randall  Havens 

Mila  Mangrum  Cearley  Helen  Rose  Sargent 

Etta  Shrock  Vinnie  Robinson 

Katherine  Westbrook 


*Absent  on  leave.       **Afhliated. 


336 


Ethel   Robinson 
Ada   Cline 
Hazel  Chase 
Anita  Truman 
Lucie    Altona 


Louise   Perkins 
Grace   Garrigue 
Alice    McCoy 
Helen    Havens 
Hazel   Ingels 


Gladys  Lewis 
Serena   Maddux 
Helen   Dabney 
Yinnie   Robinson 
Etta    Shrock 


Alice    Hiestand 
Grace  Ewing 
Hazel   Orr 
Helen   Sargent 
Lurline   Browning 


Nan     Browning 
Florence   McCoy 
Engelena    Ward 
Norma  Umphred 
Mila  Cearley 

337 


SORORITIES 


Alpha  Phi 

Founded  at  Syracuse  University  in   1872 
Lambda  Chapter — Established  in  1901 


MEMBERS 

Class  of  1912 

IEmily  Mabel  Clinch  Florence  Edith  Doyle 

Grace  Griffiths 

Class  of  1913 


Rose  Rosalee  Farrell 
Marcella  Spring  Moore 
Helen  Mary  Weber 
Frances  Ferrier 
*Ruth  Marie  Ryan 


Mary  Gladys  Cole 
Barbara  Grace  Nachtrieb 
Mary  K.  Dunne 
Laura  Josephine  Lamoureux 
**Edna  Wheeler 


Class  of  1914 
Florence  Isabel  Hall  *Gertrude  Kron 

Esther  Cooley  Helen  Atherton 

Lucy  Miriam  Pray  Deborah  Hathaway  Dyer 

Fannie  Marie  Whitman 


*Phoebe  Bunker 
Helen  Elizabeth  Blacow 
Elizabeth  Erskine  Ferrier 
Laura  Lulu  Lattin 
Katherine  Ransom  Vail 


Class  of  1915 

Evalyn  Wagener 
Elizabeth  Marie  Whittle 
Delphine  Margaret  Ferrier 
Ruth  Sturtevant 
Irene  Ruth  Reid 


"Absent  on  leave. 


^Affiliated. 


(•Graduated  December,   1911. 


338 


Grace  Griffiths  Helen   Weber  Florence   Doyle  Rose    Farrell 

Frances  Ferrier  Gladys    Cole  Barbara   Nachtrieb       Mary    Dunne  Laura    Lamoureux 

Deborah    Dyer  Isabel    Hall  Fannie   Whitman  Lucy  Pray 

Gertrude  Kron  Esther  Cooley  Helen    Blacow  Katherine  Vail 

Elizabeth  Whittle         Laura  Lattin  Ruth    Sturtevant  Phoebe   Bunker  Elizabeth   Ferrier 

Helen  Atherton  Delphine  Ferrier  Irene   Reid  Evalyn  Wagener 


339 


SORORITIES 


Chi  Omega 

Founded  at  the  University  of  Arkansas  in   1895 
Mu  Chapter— Established  in  1902 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 

Amanda  Jacobsen 


Alice  Armstrong 


Class  of  1912 

Catherine  Lois  Walker 


Class  of  1913 

Helen  de  Ette  Ayer  *Margaret  Pewtress 

Beryl  Mae  Fountaine  Mabel  Marvin  Ware 

*Clerimond  Withers  Gail  Sipes 

Class  of  1914 

Marie  Randolph  Phleger  Violet  Nebelung 

*Elsie  Edwin  Treacy  Florence  Wells 

Ida  Clinton  Ingraham 


Oneida    Madison 

Ruby  Jones 

Ruth   Margaret  Brown 

Florence  Augusta  Judkins 

Marie  Derby 


Class  of  1915 

*Elizabeth  Huggins 
Catherine  Broughton  Robinson 
Antoinette  Dye 
Jean  Evans 
Alice  Dodge 


"■Absent  on  leave. 


340 


Catherine    Walker         Mabel    Ware  Helen    Ayer  Amanda  Jacobsen 

Alice    Armstrong  Beryl    Fountaine  Margaret    Pewtress      Gail    Sipes 

Clerimond    Withers      Violet    Nebelung  Catherine  Robinson      Antoinette    Dye  Marie   Phleger 

Florence   Wells  Jean    Evans  Florence  Judkins  Oneida    Madison 

Elizabeth   Huggins        "Marie   Derby  Ruby    Jones  Ruth    Brown 


341 


SORORITIES 


Alpha  Omicron  Pi 

Founded  at  Barnard  College  in  1897 
Sigma    Chapter — Established   in    1907 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 

Jeannete  Laurie  Miller  Rose  Gardner 

Leona  Mudgett  Blanche   Evelyn  Ahlers 

Class  of  1912 

Irene  Flanagan  Grace  Yale  Weeks 

Elaine  Maude  Standish  Margaret  Hurley 

Class  of  1913 
Wynne  Marie  Meredith  *Ethel  Porter 

Mary  de  Witt  Emma  Frances  Black 

Edna  Garrett  Mildred  Lee  Hunter 

Phyllis  Elizabeth  Maguire  Georgia   Meredith 

Dorothy  Katherine  Clarke 

Class  of  1914 

Charlott  Cowie  Dorothy  Richardson 

Hertha  Albertine  Herrmann  Helen  Thayer 

Rita  Carlin  Keane  **Claudia  Massle 

Mary  Agnes  Cameron  *  Alice  Mae  Barber 

Class  of  1915 

Pearl  Louise  Pierce  Claire  Hart 

Alice  Louise  de  Veuve  Juanita  Mabel  Judy 

Alice  Elenore  Freuler  Savory  Ford 

Margaret  Genevieve  Weeks  Mabel  Lynn  Lothrop 

Edith  Helen  Dickinson  Marjorie  Morris 

Beth  Johnson 


*Absent    on    leave.         **Affiliated. 

342 


Margaret  Hurley   Leona  Mudgett        Irene    Flanagan      Grace    Weeks  Blanche    Ahlers 

Emma    Black  Mary    de    Witt       Ethel    Porter  Mildred  Hunter     Elaine  Standish      Alice    Barber 

Phyllis  Maguire      Georgia    Meredith  Dorothy    Clarke      Wynne  Meredith    Hertha    Herrmann    Rita    Keane 
Helen   Thayer  Claudia  Massie        Charlott    Cowie       Margaret  Weeks    Claire  Hart  Mary  Cameron 

Dorothy  Richardson    Beth   Johnson  Alice   Freuler  Pearl    Pierce  Mabel   Lothrop       Marjorie   Morris 

Savory    Ford  Alice  de  Veuve      Edith    Dickinson    Juanita  Judy  Teanette   Miller 

343 


SORORITIES 


Delta  Gamma 


Founded  at  the  University  of  Mississippi  in  1872 
Gamma  Chapter — Established  in   1907 

MEMBERS 

Class  of  1912 

Dorothy    Campbell   Fish  Caro  Halstead  Simoxsqn 

Class  of  1913 

Alice  Henrietta  Connick  Marie  Lyma  Vaissade 

Jeax  Maria  Cunningham  *Christixe  Turner 

Emily  Russell  Churchill  Dorothy  Ina  Peterson 

Mary  Bogue 


Gertrude  Hawk. 
Mildred  Lenore  Dodge 
Zelia  Caroline  Vaissade 
Laura  Marguerite  Hanke 
Florence  Bell  Madsen 
Eleanor  Webster 


Class  of  1914 

Hazel  Pauline  Tietzen 
**Elizabeth  Robinson 
**Helen  McDonald 
Maryly  Krusi 
Hazel  Harriet  Hope 
♦Marie  Dieckmann 


Hertha  Todd 

Helen  Reef 

Doris    Marianne   Hutchins 

Hazel  King 


Class  of  1915 

Leona  Gooch 
Erma  Denny  Taggart 
Ruth  Thornburg 
Kathleen  Rogers 


Anna  Dodge 


*Absent  on  leave.       **Affiliated. 


344 


Caro    Simonson  Emily   Churchill  Dorothy   Peterson         Jean    Cunningham 

Dorothy    Fish  Maryly  Krusi  Marie    Vaissade  Hazel*  Hope  Gertrude   Connick 

Mary    Bogue  Eleanor    Webster         Hazel   Tietzen  Elizabeth   Robinson 

Mildred  Dodge  Florence    Madsen  Hertha    Todd  Gertrude    Hawk 

Leona   Gooch  Zelia  Vaissade  Laura   Hanke  Irma    Taggart  Ruth   Thornburg 

Doris    Hutchins  Hazel   King  Helen  Reef  Kathleen   Rogers 


345 


SORORITIES 


Alpha  Xi  Delta 

Founded  at  Lombard   College   in   1892 
California    Chapter — Established    in    1909 


MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Edna  Louise  Pracy 

Class  of  1912 
Elizabeth  Lowry  Alice  Maxwell 

Margaret  Estelle  Engle  Lulu  Rubke 

Charlotte  Genevieve  Touhey  *Grace  Gibson 


Charlotte  Linden 
Beulah  Kerns 


Class  of  1913 

Eveline  Louise  Bridgett 
Lucetta  Morton  Bromley 
Ruth  Augusta  Stark 


Class  of  1914 

Marguerite  Herbst  Florence  Veness 

Annie  Florilla  Squier  Charlotte  Nevil  Hurd 

**Florence  Ball  Katherine  Todd 

Class  of  1915 

Cora  Mildred  Helfrich  Catherine  Rogers 

Arline  Baugh  Marie  Elizabeth  Bradford 

Allene  Bartmess  Myrtle  Lovdal 

Lora  Williamson  Florence  Margaret  Baker 


*■  Absent    on    leave. 


f*  Affiliated. 


346 


Charlotte  Linden  Grace  Gibson  Margaret    Engle  Lulu   Rubke  Charlotte  Touhey 

Eveline  Bridgett  Ruth   Stark  Elizabeth  Lowry  Lucetta   Bromley  Alice   Maxwell 

Charlotte   Hurd  Annie    Squier  Katherine   Todd  Beulah   Kerns  Marguerite  Herbst 

Catherine   Rogers  Florence    Ball  Marie   Bradford  Mildred  Helfrich  Florence   Veness 

Lora    Williamson  Myrtle  Lovdal  Allene  Bartmess  Florence  Baker 


347 


SORORITIES 


Alpha  Chi  Omega 

Founded  at  De  Pauw  University  in  1885 
Pi  Chapter— Established  in  1909 

MEMBERS 
Graduate 


KATHERINE  LUC1LE  ASHER 


Ei>a  Lillian  Long 


Class  of  1912 

Isabelle  Marguerite  Creighton*         **Maeel  Winifred  Farrington 
Gertrude  Ann  Rice  Alice  Nickerson 

Marion  Elizabeth  Hitchcock  Elma  Scott 

Elsie  Marion  Stoddard  **Altce  Crabb 

Mildred  Washburn  Jordan  **Olive  Rebekah  LaClair 

** Pearl  Jeannette  Tuttle 


Fdwina  Fay  Frisbie 
Kathleen  Minerva  Kerr 
*Elna  Blaine  Clifford 


Lottie  Blain  Bocarde 
Alice  Minerva  Osborn 


Class  of  1913 

Florence  Elizabeth  Marvin 
Alice  Choate  Streets 
Florence  Marie  Cook 
Ethel  Beard 

Class  of  1914 

Francis  Jackling 
Nellie  Blanche  Winham 


Ethel  M.  Bartlett 
Hazel  Alice  Pfitzer 
Fa  ye  Marjorie  Cortner 


Class  of  1915 

Leila  Neilson 
Jessie  Clifford 
Lucile  Batdorf 

Ruth  Swasey 


*  Absent    on    leave. 


'Affiliated. 


348 


Mildred   Jordan  Pearl 

Gertrude  Rice  Faye   Cortner 

Elma    Scott  Klsie    Stoddard 

Kathleen  Kerr  Alice   Nickerson 

Alice    Streets 

Nellie   Winham 


Tuttle  Mabel   Farrington         Eda    Long 

Marion   Hitchcock         Leila  Neilson  Alice    Crabb 

Olive    La    Clair  Ethel    Beard  Isabelle   Creighton 

Elna    Clifford  Fay    Frisbie  Lottie    Bocarde 

Ethel    Bartlett  Florence    Marvin  Florence   Cook 

Minerva   Osborne  Lucile     Batdorf  Hazel    Pfitzer 


349 


SORORITIES 


ZK 


Sigma  Kappa 

Founded  at  Colby  College  in   1874 
Lambda  Chapter — Established  in  1910 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 

Elda  Marie  Eggert  Olive  Myrtle  Chubb 

Elma    McCann 

Class  of  1912 
Eva  Lucile  Marshall  Helen  Marie  Phelan 

Mildred  Elvira  Norcross  Grace  Hamilton 

Class  of  1913 

*Eda  Lorena  Colvin  Ruth  Anna  Ware 

Helen  Clover  Johnson  Hope  Lockridge 

Florence  Payne  Moore  *Nell  Wait 

Class  of  1914 
Grace  Van  Dyke  Bird  Jennie  Olga  Kreyenhagen 

Natalia  Nevada  Durney  Alta  Marie  Struckmeyer 

Class  of  1915 
Frances  Jane  Patton  Ella  Livingston 

Ethel  Carey  Eveleth  Mabel  Ruth  Johnson 

Minnie  Marguerite  Cron  Anna  Maude  Bowden 


*Absent  on  leave. 


350 


Grace  Hamilton  Ruth  Ware  Elda   Eggert 

Olive  Chubb  Eda  Colvin  Helen   Phelan 

Lucile  Marshall  _  Helen  Johnson  Hope  Lockridge  Grace 

Jennie  Kreyenhagen    Natalia   Durney  Ethel  Eveleth 

Minnie   Cron  Elma  McCann  Ella  Livingston 


Mildred  Norcross 
Florence  Moore 
Bird  Alta    Struckmeyer 

Frances  Patton 
Ruth  Johnson 


351 


rr 


FRATERNITIES 


Zeta  Psi 

Founded  at  the  College  of  the  City  of  New  York  in  1847 
Iota  Chapter — Established  in  1870 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 
George  Cunningham   Edwards  Orrin  Kip  McMurray 

Joseph  Nisbet  LeConte  Carl  Copping  Plehn 

Wallace  Irving  Terry  Joseph  Rowell 

Class  of  1912 
Ernest  George  Clewe  Irwin  Campbell  Berry 

*William  Edward  Zuill  **Raymond  William  Hawley 

Class  of  1913 
Gustav  Crittenden  Reis  Remi  Chabot  Knight 

William  Norris  King  Daniel  McPeak 


Richard  Olcott  Burr 
*Bedford  Boyes 
David  Duncan,  Jr. 


Class  of  1914 

George  Mearns  Finley 
William   Howard  Finley 
Ivan  Andrew  Ringheim 


Class  of  1915 


Roswell  Miller 
Charles  Zook  Sutton 
Bonner  James  Gordon 
Walter  Schilling 
Sidney  Eliott  Bretherton 


Lloyd  Straube  Gilmour 
Charles  Henry  Davis 
John  Albert  Cole  Waters 
Alvah   Putnam  Conklin 
Alexander   Mann   King 


•Absent  on  leave. 


*  Affiliated. 


354 


Ernest   Clewe  Irwin    Berry  William   Znill 

Raymond   Hawley         Gustav    Reis  Ivan    Ringheim  William   King 

Daniel    McPeak  David   Duncan  Richard   Burr  John    Waters  Lloyd    Gilmour 

15onner  Gordon  Charles   Davis  Charles  Sutton  Alvah   Conklin 

Walter    Schilling  Sidney   Rretherton         Roswell    Miller 


355 


FRATERNITIES 


Chi   Phi 

Founded  at  Princeton  in  1824 
Lambda  Chapter — Established  in  1875 

MEMBERS 
Regent  of  the  University 
Hiram  Warren  Johnson 

Faculty 
*Joseph  Chamberlain 

Graduate 
Albert  John  Evers 

Class  of  1912 
Edward  Louis  Watts  **Charles   LeRoy   Butler 

Harold  Augustus  Fletcher  James  Byers  Black 

Class  of  1913 
*  Meredith   Parker  *  Fargo  Fenton  Rose 

Lewis  Morris  Foulke  Sidney  Gaskill  Carleton 

Arthur   Peronneau  Hayne 

Class  of  1914 
Charles  Albert  Edwards,  Jr.  *Chester  Allen  Hollister 

*Albert  Augustus  Hinchman,  Jr.     *William  John  Goebel 
William  Charles  Tupper 

Class  of  1915 

Joseph  de  Lindeth  Waithman  *Gladstone  Reed 

Tracy  Wilmerding  Harron  *Sydney  Mezes  Wynne 

*Hubert  Stanley  Emanuels  *John  Pressley  Phillips 

Robert   McKee   Sherrard 


♦Absent  on  leave.  ""'Graduated  1911. 

356 


Louis   Watts  Albert    Evers  Roy    Butler 

Harold    Fletcher  James   Black  Meredith   Parker  Lewis   Fotll!:« 

Sidney   Carlton  Carl    Edwards  Albert  Ilinchman  Tracy   Ilarron  Chester  Hollister 

Hubert   Emanuels  William    Goebel  William    Tupper  John    Phillips 

Gladstone    Reed  Joseph    Waithman         Sydney  Wynne 


357 


FRATERNITIES 


Delta  Kappa  Epsilon 

Founded  at  Yale  in  1844 
Theta  Zeta  Chapter — Established  in  1876 


MEMBERS 

Faculty 
Henry  W.  Ballentine  Charles  G.  Hyde 

William  Augustus  Merrill  Carlos  Bransby 

Adolph  Caspar  Miller 

Class  of  1912 
Benjamin  Callister  Corlett  Michael  Joel  Dillman,  Jr. 

Wolcott  Pratt  Stanton  Samuel  Gerrit  Wight 

Byington  Ford 

Class  of  1913 
***Marcus  C   Stearns 

Class  of  1914 
John  Jerrold  Meigs  Edward  Meacham  Barn  ham 

*James  Stuart  Jolly  Ernest  Ford  Nolting 

Chester  D.  Bonestell 

Class  of  1915 

Fritz  Tubbs  Hens  haw  *Henry  Ridgway  Vail 

William  Lloyd  Hook  Edwin   Locksley   Stanton 

Hector  A.   McNeill  Chandler  Parks  Barton 


*  Absent  on  leave. 


'♦♦Affiliated. 


358 


liyington    Ford  Ben   Ccilett  Wolcott    Stanton  Joel    Dillman 

Samuel    Wight  Stuart  Jolly  Jen-old    Meigs 

Edward  Burnham  Hector  McNeill  Ernest    Nolting  Fritz    Henshaw 

John    Evans  Edwin  Stanton  Lloyd    Hook 

Ridgway  Vail  Chester  Bonestell  Chandler    Barton  Marcus  Stearns 


359 


FRATERNITIES 


Beta  Theta  Pi 

Founded  at  Miami  University  in  1839 
Omega  Chapter — Established  in  1879 

MEMBERS 

Regents  of  the  University 

Charles   Stetson   Wheeler  Guy  Chaffee  Earl 

Faculty 
Warren  Olney,  Jr.  Louis  de  Fontenay  Barti.lti 

William   Dallam   Armes  George   Malcolm    Stratton 

Herbert   Charles   Moffitt  Henry  James   Kesner 

Henry  Rand  Hatfield  Ernest   Bryant   Hoag 

Class  of  1912 

Charles  Stetson  Wheeler,  Jr.  Harold  Stuart  Chase 

James    Harrison    Thomson  Archibald   Bruce   Tinning 

Louis    McCrory   Jackson  Elbert  Merritt  Vail 

Henry  Norbert  Wolff  Gerald  Driscoll  Kennedy 

Class  of  1913 
Raymond  Moffet  Hill  Lloyd  Alexander  Sloane 

Cecil  Temple  Thomas  Nicholas   Lloyd   Taliaferro 

Stanley   Fisk   Bryan 

Class  of  1914 
Eliot   Huff   Downing  *Benjamin  Henry  Wyman   Taylor 

*Sidney   Coe   Howard  Frank    Bigelow   Cook 

Oliver   Lincoln    Haines 

Class  of  1915 

*Constant   Havens   Robinson  Frank  Garcelon  Steward 

Joe   Frederick   Hunt  George  Walter  Wolff 

Frederick  John   Moller  *Charles  John  Lindgren 

*Charles    Hubbard   Thomas 


*  Absent  on  leave. 

360 


Harold    Chase  Archibald   Tinning        Jame  Thomson  Arthur  Saxe  Charles   Wheeler 

Lloyd   Sloane  Elbert   Vail  Gerald   Kennedy  Raymond   Hill  Louis    Jackson 

Frank   Cook  Oliver  Haines  Eliot   Downing  Henry  Taylor 

Nicholas    Taliaferro      Charles   Lindgren  George   Wolff  Cecil    Thomas  Frederick    Moller 

Stanley   T'ryan  Joe   Hunt  Constant   Robinson       Charles  Thomas  Frank  Steward 


361 


FRATERNITIES 


Phi  Gamma  Delta 

Founded  at  Jefferson  College  in  1848 
Delta  Xi  Chapter— Established  in  1886 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

George  Holmes  Howison  Charles  Derleth 

Graduate 
George   Gross   Harlowe 

Class  of  1912 

Stanley  Demalayne  Cowden  Harry  Rogers  Lawton 

Robert  Spencer  Currey  Howard  Thomas  Douglas 

Frank  Samuel  Hudson 

Class  of  1913 

Archie  James  Beckett  James  Frederick  MacDonald 


Louis  Spencer  Davis 
John  Thomas  Gribner 

Paul  Dana  Bartlett 
Donald  Geary 
Frank  Philip  Gribner 
Le  Roy  Philip  Hunt 


Ormond  Ralston  Smith 
Charles  Wade  Snook 


Class  of  1914 


Ernest  Randolph  Lasell 
Harry  Porter  Pohlman 
Warde  Wood  Sorrick 
Harold  Parrish  Williams 


George  Dwight  Wood 

Class  of  1915 
*Frank  Edward  Agar  Kenneth  DeWitt  Fobes 

*Merritt  Barton  Curtis  Henry  Wood  Harlowe 

John   Welby  Dinsmore  Alpheus  Stewart 

Robert  Eunson  Mills  Leo  Edward  Noonan 


'Absent  on  leave. 


362 


Robert  Currey  Frank    Hudson  Harry    I. 

John  Gribner  James   Mac  Donald 

Spencer  Davis  Harry    Pohlman  Ormond 

Donald    Geary  Paul  Bartlett 

Harold    Williams  Ward   Sorrick  Kenneth 

Alpheus   Stewart  Henry    Ilarlowe 


awton  Stanley   Cowden  George    Harlowe 

Wade    Snook  Howard    Douglas 

Smith  Archie  Beckett  Frank   Gribner 

I.eKoy   Hunt  Ernest   Lasell 

Fobes  Frank   Agar  Robert  Mills 

.Merritt    Curtis  lohn   Dinsmore 


363 


FRATERNITIES 


Phi  Delta  Theta 

Founded  at  Miami  University  in  1848 
California   Alpha   Chapter— Established   in    1873;    re-established   in   1886 

MEMBERS 
Faculty 

Samuel  Benedict  Christy  George  Frederick   Reinhardt 

Edward  Booth  Victor  Hendricks  Henderson 

William  Cakey  Jones  George  Wright  Shaw- 

Harry  Beale  Torrey  Herman   White  Reynolds 

Emmett  Le  Roy  Wemple 

Graduate 

Harold   Harrison  Ashley 

Class  of  1912 

**Charles  Warren  Pauly  Harold  Eastman  Haven 

Carl  Albert  Phleger  Herman  H.  Phleger 

Walter  Hugo   Schroeder  Albert  John   Rathbone 

Class  of  1913 

Spencer  Mastick  Hugh  Kling  Berkley 

Class  of  1914 
Charles  Seffens  Dodge  Frederick  Bruner  Hornick 

Samuel  Halsey  Thompson  Harold  Pasmore  Nachtrieb 

Phelps  Dodge  Jewett  Leland  Sereno  Rathbone 

*Edward  Rankin   Brainerd,   Jr.  William    Everett   Barnard 

*Laurence  Berkley 

Class  of  1915 
Roeert  Edward  Christy  James   Hamilton   Todd,  Jr. 

Stanley  Powell  James  Frederick  Thomas 

Victor  Hugo  Doyle  Carroll  Lyon  Kauffman 

Carleton  D.  Dethlefsen  Harry  Lippincott  Dunn 

***Paul  Fletcher  Cadman  Reuben    Wilmarth    Hills,  Jr. 

Edgar  Woods  Maybury 

•Absent  on  leave.         **Graduated  Dec,    1911.         ***Affiliated. 

364 


Albert    Rathbone  Charles 

Harold    Haven  Leland    Rathbone 

Walter   Schroeder         Phelps    Jewett 
Kverett  Barnard  Carroll    Kauffman 


James  Thomas 


Pauly  Herman  Phleger  Harold  Ashley 

Spencer   Mastick  Harold   Nachtrieb  Charles    Dodge 

Edward   Brainerd  Stanley    Powell  Fred  Hornick 

Harry    Dunn  Robert    Christy  James   Todd 


Carleton    Dethlefsen     Paul    Cadman 


Victor    Doyle 


365 


FRATERNITIES 


Sigma  Chi 


Founded  at  Miami  University  in  1855 
Alpha   Beta  Chapter— Established  in    1886 

MEMBERS 
Faculty 


Charles   Albert   Noble 
Arthur  Wurts  Whitney 
George    Rupert    MacMinn 


William  Hammond  Wright 
Elmer  Edgar  Hall 
James  Lyman  Whitney 


Graduate 

Edwin  Alexander  McKanna 

Class  of  1912 
Arne  Knud  Bours  Hoisholt  Sherwin  Bennett  Davis 

Arnold  Thornton  Brown  Clarence  Merle  Price 

Robert  Rugh  Thomas  John   Sanford  Halbert 


Class  of  1913 


William  Bennett  Miller 
Harold  Edwin   Gray 


Charles  Grunsky 
Jacob  William  Hartman 


Class  of  1914 
Warren   Bronson  Lane  David  Wells  Conrey 

Latimer  Emery  Doan  Melvin   Dudley  Boyd 

Bert    Betheford    Banta  Hughes  Madeley 

Ernest  Creswell  Brown  Charles  Edward  Lutz 

Hamilton  Cecil  Cautley  Maurice  Junior  Bleuel 

Class  of  1915 
Arthur  Lee  Cuningham,  Jr.  Eustace  James  Angwin 

Lester  Amiel  Daugherty  John  Leslie  Spear 

Frank  Dunn  Halbert  George  Murch  Dick 


366 


Arnold    Brown  Robert     Thomas  .Merle    Price  Sherwin    Davis  Arne    Hoisholt 

Jack    Hartman  William    Miller  Charles  Grunsky  John    Halbert  Harold   Gray 

Maurice  Bleuel  David  Conrey  Charles  Lutz  Warren  Lane 

Hamilton  Cautley  Frank   Halbert  Bert    Banta  Ernest   Brown  Melvin  Boyd 

Hughes    Madeley  Lester   Daugherty         John   Spear  George   Dick  Arthur   Cunningham 


367 


FRATERNITIES 


Sigma  Nu 

Founded  at  Virginia  Militaiy  Institute  in  1869 
Beta  Psi  Chapter — Established  in  1892 


MEMBERS 

Faculty 
George  Henry  Boke 

Hastings  College  of  Law 

Anthony   Caminetti  Leroy  Vernon  Hitchcock 

**+George  Waldo  Weeks,  Jr.  Samuel  Stanclift  Stevens 

Class  of  1912 
Raymond  Clifford  Ingram  Thomas  Briggs  Rice 

Class  of  1913 
Charles  William  Heyer,  Jr.  Stephen  Kent  Mead 

*Rex  Rice  Eric  Kenneth  Craig 

Class  of  1914 
*Charles  Harold  Turner  Fred  Day  Hihn 

Rhett  McMahon  Vincent  Calley  Dickinson 

Edward  Geoffrey  Van  Dyke  Bangs    Delmar  Rogers  Jacobs 

Class  of  1915 
Jasper  William  Tully  Albert  Colis  Mitch um 

Roland  Eugene  Doan 
Fred  Holberg  Reimers 
*Benjamin   Carroll  Haile 


Ted  Rice 
Gerald  Westfall 
Olaf  Lindblom 


*Absent  on  leave. 


***Affi1iated. 


368 


Rex  Rice  George   Weeks  Raymond  Ingram 

Samuel  Stevens  Thomas  Rice  Fred  Hihn  Charles  Heyer 

Delmar   Jacobs  Eric    Craig  Rhett    McMahon 

Vincent    Dickinson  Fred    Reimers  Edward  Bangs  Colis  Mitchum 

Benjamin  Haile  Roland  Doan  Jasper   Tully 


369 


FRATERNITIES 


>4p  '-■/      <W 

Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon 

Founded  at  the  University  of  Alabama  in  1856. 
California  Beta  Chapter — Established  in  1894. 


MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Stuart  Daggett 


Class  of  1912 
***John   Peter   Buwalda  **John    Wheelwright   Barnett 

Chester  Thomas   Malcolm 

Class  of  1913 

John  Allen  Stroud,  Jr.  Oliver  Creighton  Wyllie 

Oscar   Sargent   Norton  Rollo  Clark  Wheeler 

Danilo  John  Tadich  ***Robert  Leroy  Jones 

***Charles  Reader  Blood  Henry  Hiram  Ray 

Class  of  1914 
Joel   Shepard   Conklin  Douglas   Knox   Hotchkiss 

John  Cornelius  Feeley,  Jr.  Christopher  A.  Buckley,  Jr. 

Charles  Glyde  Hurrle  *Harry  Haskell  Boone 

***Reis  Joseph   Ryland  Arthur  Chisholm  Drysdale 

John  Farvvell  Hotchkiss 

Class  of  1915 
Lloyd  Lawrie  Stroud  Louis  Roy  Turner 

Esmond  Fenton  Wiley  Stanley   Willcox   Coon 

Orrin  Loyola  Graves  Otto  Durham  Rasmussen 

Stanley  Tilden  Runyon 


*Absent  on  leave. 


'Graduated   Dec,    1911. 


'Affiliated. 


370 


Robert  Jones  John   Buwalda  John   Barnett  Chester    Malcolm  Henry    Ray 

Sargent    Norton  John    Feeley  lohn    Stroud  Rollo    Wheeler  Oliver    Wyllie 

Glyde  Hurrle  Joel   Conklin  Christopher  Buckley      John   Hotchkiss 

Harry  Boone  Arthur  Drysdale  Danilo    Tadich  Orrin    Gravem  Stanley    Coon 

Otto    Rasmussen  Stanley   Runyon  Esmond   Wiley  Reis   Ryland  Lloyd    Stroud 


371 


FRATERNITIES 


Chi  Psi 

Founded  at  Union  College  in  1841 
Alpha  Delta  Delta— Established  in  1S95 

MEMBERS 

College  of  Dentistry 

Emmet   Nicholson   Britton 

Class  of  1912 
Morse   Adams   Cartwright  Harry   G.    Gabbert 

William  Warren  Ferrier  Stuart   Gardiner   Wilder 

Class  of  1913 

Milton  Iv:rr  Campbell  *Gerald   Francis   Herrmann 

James  Ernest  Harvey  John  Pitman  Tripp 

Carl  Benjamin   Johnson  Kenneth  Quinton  Volk 

Class  of  1914 
♦Raymond  Cooper  Branion  August  Frederick  Muenter 

Allen  Morrow  Frank   Hylton   Postlethwaitf. 

Gilbeht   Hampton   Sweet 

Class  of  1915 
Boyd  Rieman   Abbott  Frank  Howard  Le  Nora 

Kenneth   Anton   Carey  *Charles  Theodore  Prehn 

Douglas   Drew   McConnell  Charles  Jefferson   Wetzel 


f Absent  on  leave. 


372 


Warren    Ferrier  Stuart   Wilder  Fmniet  Britton  Harry   Gabbert 

Morse   Cartwright         James    Harvey  John   Tripp  Kenneth    Yolk  Milton   Campbell 

Carl   Johnson  Frank  Postlethwaite     Gerald   Herrmann         Gilbert   Sweet 

August   Muenter  Raymond  Branion  Douglas  McConnell      Frank   Le   Noir  Charles  Wetzel 

Boyd   Abbott  Allen   Morrow  Charles  Prehn  Anton  Carey 


373 


FRATERNITIES 


Kappa  Alpha 

Founded  at  Washington  and  Lee  University  in   1865 
Alpha  Xi  Chapter— Established  in  1895 


MEMBERS 

Graduate 
Norman   Clay  Hutt 

Class  of  1912 

Harry  Henderson    Macpherson  Frank  Albert  Roller 

Erle  Roy  Dickover 


Class  of  1913 


John  Henry  Connolly,  Jr. 
Julius  Arthur  Potter 


Arthur  Sidney  Hallberg 
Arthur   Peter  Cortelyou 


Class  of  1914 
Travis  Calhoun  Hutton  Carl  George  Grimes 

Leo  David  Hermle  Chester  Bradford  Ellis 

Owen  Neyle  Jones  ***Charles   Pringle   Sonntag 

Class  of  1915 

George  Earl  Jones  Albert  Kay  Sherwin 

Chester  Alexander  Sparey  Robert  Egbert  Jeffress 

Aaron  Lucas   McCray  *Ralph  Julian  Scherzer 

Chandos   Barrett  Castle  Richard   Joseph    Welch,  Jr. 

Donald  Walter  Whitesell  Frank  Stuart  Miller 


'Absent  on  leave. 


"■Transferred. 


374 


Harry  Macpherson        Erie   Dickover  Julius   Potter  John  Connolly 

Frank  Roller  Owen  Jones  Norman  Hutt  Arthur  Cortelyou 

Arthur  Hallberg  Leo  Hermle  Albert  Sherwin  Carl   Grimes  Chester    Ellis 

Travis  Hutton  Chester   Sparey  Donald  Whitesell         George    Jones 

Richard  Welch  Chandos  Castle  Aaron  McCray  Frank   Miller 


375 


FRATERNITIES 


Delta  Upsilon 

Founded  at  Williams  College  in  1834 
California  Chapter — Established  in  1896 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Alexis  Frederick  Lange  Thomas  Sidney  Elston 

George  Rapall  Noyes  Robert  W.  Sibley 

Class  of  1912 

William  Harold  Conlin  Laurel  Revel  Miller 

**Jay  Dwiggins,  Jr.  John   Robert  Suman 

Joseph  Muth  McCoy  *Leslie  Alexander  Grier 

Class  of  1913 
Hudson  Packer  Hibbard  George  Howard  Robinson 

Frank  Morgan  Nilon  John  Lowrey  Simpson 

Henry  Armstrong  Stern  Victor  Ford  Collins 

Class  of  1914 

Roy  Leete  Collins  Robert  Clarence  Ogden 

Paul  LeRoy  Edwards  Martin  Burris  Reed 

George  Gent  Meckfessel  Stephen  Nicholas  Wyckoff,  Jr. 

Class  of  1915 

Chester  Broom  hall  Cowgill  Erling  William  Hedemann 

Charles  Edgar  Driver  Benjamin  Dewitt  Knapp 

Reginald  de  la  Cuesta  Richard  Peter  Minor 

Earl  Joseph  Fenstermacher  *Charles  White  Peters 

Harold  Mitchell  Pierce 


♦Absent  on  leave.  **Graduated  19]  1. 

376 


John   Suman  William  Conlin  Jay    Dwiggins  Revel    Miller 

Leslie   Grier  Frank  Nilon  Henry   Stern  John    Simpson  Hudson    Hibbard 

Howard  Robinson  Roy    Collins  Martin    Reed  Paul    Edwards 

Victor    Collins  Stephen    Wyckoff  Charles   Peters  Benjamin    Knapp 

Richard  Minor  George   Meckfessel       Clarence    Ogden  Chester  Cowgill       Reginald    de    la    Cuesta 

Harold  Pierce  Earl    Fenstermacher     Filing  Hedemann         Charles    Driver 


377 


FRATERNITIES 


x 

Delta  Tau  Delta 

Founded  at  Bethany  College  in  1859 
Beta  Omega  Chapter — Established  in  1898 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Arm  in   Otto  Leuschner  Warren  Charles  Perry 

Charles  Edward  Rugh  Elijah   Shaynes 

Medical  Department 
Frank  Lewis  Kelley 

Graduates 

*Robert  Denny   Peebles  *Percy   Dewitt   Kincaid 

Class  of  1912 

**Edwin  Scott  Walker  George  Leigh  Rodgers 

Thomas  William  Veitch  Frederick  George  Tickell 

Gilbert  Dan  Willoughby 

Class  of  1913 
Charles  Kenneth  White  Richard  Dyer  Jones 

William  Wilson  Gay  John  Janney  Miller 

Robert  McMurray  Hunt 

Class  of  1914 

William   Robert  Nevins  *Oswald  Guion  Lawton 

*Kenneth    Seth    Griffin 

Class  of  1915 

Lansing  Bliss  Bailey  Earl  Thomas   Parrish 

Theodore  Edward  Thomas  Haley   Gustav  Albert  Moller 
Ellard  Henley  Beans  Archibald  Luther  Parmelee 

*Clifford  Frank  Rutledge  Arthur  Chamberlain  Latham 


♦Absent   on    leave.         **Graduated    Dec,    1911. 

378 


Percy   Kincaid  William    Gay  Robert  Hunt  Thomas  Veitch 

Gilbert  Willoughby      John  Miller  Theodore  Haley  Robert    Nevins  Richard  Jones 

Kenneth    Griffin  Kenneth    White  Archibald    Parmelee     Earl    Parrish 

Lansing   Bailey  Gustav    Moller  Clifford   Rutledge  Ellard    Beans 


379 


FRATERNITIES 


n 


Phi  Kappa  Psi 

Founded  at  Jefferson  College  in  1852 
California  Gamma  Chapter — Established  in  1899 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Grover  Chester  Noble 

Class  of  1912 
**Guy  Leonard  Goodwin  **Harry  Lawrence   Fredericks 

John  Joseph   Parker  Ralph  Brooks  High 

Eugene  Roy  Welch  George  Dins  more  Hansen 

Henry  Eugene  Jackson 

Class  of  1913 

William  Landon   Bagby  Arlo  Verner  Turner 


*Horace  D.   Ulery 
Thomas   Boyns  Hawkins 
George  S.  Fredericks 
Max  Nesmith  Yerxa 

*Chester  Vernon  Tufts 


Class  of  1914 

John   Lawrence  Schoolcraft 


Andrew  Izer  Sm  itii 
Oliver  Deveta  Hamlin 
Xf.ii.l   Cedric  Cornwall 
Thomas  Horton  Dills 


Kenneth  Clark  Ables 
Joseph  Louis  McKim 
*Roy  Sibley  Ish 
John   Robert  Wieland 


Class  of  1915 

Warren  Francis  Sanford 
Leslie  St.  Claire  Robinson 
George  Seth  Daniels 
Laurence  Warrington   Boothe 


Robert  Whitley   Miller 


John   Oliver  Armistead 


♦Absent  on   leave. 


♦♦Graduated  1911. 


380 


Henry  Jackson  Ralph   High  Harry    Fredericks         Guy   Goodwin  John    Parker 

William  Bagby  Alio  Turner  Eugene  Welch  George  Hansen 

Thomas  Hawkins  John   Schoolcraft  Horace   Ulery  George   Fredericks        Andrew   Smith 

Max   Yerxa  Kenneth    Abies  Warren  Sanford  Neill    Cornwall  Oliver    Hamlin 

Thomas   Dills  Leslie   Robinson  John   Wieland  Roy  Ish 

George  Daniels  Joseph   McKim  Laurence    Roothe         John  Armistead  Robert   Miller 

381 


FRATERNITIES 


Alpha  Tau  Omega 

Founded  at  Virginia  Military  Institute  in  1865 
California    Gamma    Iota    Chapter — Established    in    1900 

MEMBERS 
Faculty 


Oliver    Miles   Washburn 


Exum  Percival  Lewis 


Hastings  College  of  Law 

Kingsley  Warren  Cannon 


Graduate 


Clyde  Holman  Brand 


Walter  Pearson   Kelley 


Class  of  1912 

Reginald  Carlyle  Stoner  Harrold  Brooke  Knowles 

William   Simcoe  Heger,  Jr. 

Class  of  1913 
William  Kew  Francis  Abraham  Wilson 

John  Endicott  Gardner,  Jr.  James  Donald  MacMullen 

*Farrington  Ladd  Jones 

Class  of  1914 
Everett  Ferris  Graham  Charles  Henry  Gaunt,  Jr. 

Richard  Marston  Kew  *Andrew  Rocca,  Jr. 

Henry  Adolph  Kreutzmann 

Class  of  1915 
Bernard  Thompson  Rocca  Thomas  Daniel  Kirwan 

Wallace  Lemuel  Ware  Winfred  Theodore  Wilson 

John  Ignatius  McVey  Stanley  Stephen  Parker 

Paul  Caleb  Newell 


*  Absent  on  leave. 


382 


Reginald   Stoner  Walter    Kelley  Clyde  Urand  William    Heger 

Marrold   Knowles  Farrington   Jones  William   Kew  Francis   Wilson  John    Gardner 

„   Donald   MacMullen      Charles   Gaunt  Henry  Kreutzmann      Richard   Kew 

hverett   Graham  Andrew  Rocca  Rernard   Rocca  John    McVey  Winfred   Wilson 

Paul    Newell  Wallace   Ware  Thomas   Kirwan  Stanley    Parker 


3S3 


FRATERNITIES 


Theta  Delta  Chi 

Founded  at  Union  College  in  1848 
Delta  Deuteron   Charge — Established  in   1900 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Herbert  E.  Bolton  Chester  L.  Roadhouse 

Class  of  1912 
Ralph   Countryman  George  Norman  Browning 

**Watt  Willis  Clinch 

Class  of  1913 
Eugene   Daney,   Jr.  David  Ernest  Alvord 

Kendal   Phelps   Frost  Leonard  William  Buck 

Ernest  Francis  Moulton 

Class  of  1914 
Vic  Ellis  Breeden  Elvvin   Frederick   Chapman 

Class  of  1915 
Harry  Samuel  Thorp  Paul  Emmett   Terry 

Harold  Alexander  Mallum  Harry  Lovell  Jones 

Richard  Francis  Cuttle  Charles  Field  Ball 

Walter  Buckley  Crooks  Ralph  Edwin  Chapman 

'Graduated    Dec,     1911. 


384 


Francis    Moulton 

George    Browning 

Eugene   Daney 

Ralph    Countryman 

David   Alvord 

Kendal    Frost 

Vic  Breeden 

Charles    Ball 

Paul  Terry 

Ralph    Chapman 

Walter  Crooks 

Harold   Mallum 

Leonard  Buck 

Harry   Thorp 

Harry  Jones 

Richard    Cuttle 

385 


FRATERNITIES 


Kappa  Sigma 


Founded  at  the  University  of  Virginia  in  1867 
Beta  Xi  Chapter— Established  in  1901 

MEMBERS 

Hastings  College  of  Law 

Burton  Byron  Brace 

Graduate 

William  Wesley   Ki.kgan  Marshall   Andrews 

Class  of  1912 
John   Franklin  Hale  Robert    Hazeltine   Clark 


Amos   William    Elliott 


Marshall   Gould   Williamson 


Class  of  1913 

Thomas   Balfour  Dunn  Jamks  Harry  McCormack 

Frank  Howe  Dyer  *Forrest  Albert   Plant 

Rowland  Lee  Chamberlain  Stirling   Benjamin    Peart 

Richard  Whitney   Rust 

Class  of  1914 
Leo    William    Meyer  *George    Byron    Marsden 

William    Mokrell   Hale  Floyd   Howard 

Frank   Braden   Armstrong  Newton  Van  Why 

Ronald  Thomas  Strong 


Class  of  1915 


Ralph    Ensign    Merkitt 
Herbert   Percy  Atkinson 
Thomas  Gassner  Chamberlain 
Robert  Williams  Stubbs 


*Benjamin   Sidney   Moore 
Walton   Norwood  Moore 
William  Dan  Sink 
Alfred  Braley  Parsons 


Franklin    Clancie   Fay 


'Absent  on  leave. 


386 


Marshall  Williamson  William    Kergan  Amos    Elliott 

Harry    McCormack  Thomas     Dunn  Lee    Chamberlain 

Ronald    Strong  Frank   Armstrong  Leo   Meyer 

George    Marsden  Newton    Van    Why  Herbert    Atkinson 

Ralph    Merritt  Benjamin    Moore  Walton   Moore 


Sterling    Peart  John    Hale 

Forrest  Plant  Richard    Rust 

Floyd  Howard  William   Hale 

Thomas   Chamberlain  Robert    Stubbs 
Alfred   Parsons  William   Sink 


387 


FRATERNITIES 


Psi  Upsilon 

Founded  at  Union  College  in  1833 
Epsilon  Chapter — Established  in  1902 


MEMBERS 
Faculty 


R.   Selden  Rose 
Thomas  F.  Sanford 
Rudolph  Schevill 
Chauncey  Wetmore  Wells 
Edward  J.  Wickson 
Charles   Martin   Flaherty 
Richard  Warren  Harvey 


Thomas  Rutherford  Bacon 
Frederick  Thomas   Blanchard 
Edward  Bull  Clapp 
Albert  Edward  Chandler 
Bernard  Alfred  Etcheverry 
Charles  Mills  Gayley 
Leon  Josiah   Richardson 

Graduate 
Fredwick  Laurence  Gay  Theodore  Eaton   Hammond 

Class  of  1912 
Ralph   Warren   Palmer  Russell  Goodman   Graham 

Charles  Carroll  Snyder  Ferd  Somers  Peterson 

Class  of  1913 
Charles    Calvin    Herriott  Lyman  Grimes 

Roland  Irving  Stringham  Murray  Slauson  Vosburg 

Paul    Groendyke    Bulkley  David  Otto  Brant 

William   Watson  Lovett,  Jr.  Roy  Arthur  Silent 

Richard  Junius  Hill,  Jr. 

Class  of  1914 
Kenneth  Lester  Blanchard  Roy  DeWitt  Wallace 

Gabriel  Carlos  Duque  Howard  Webster  Fleming 

Norman  Loyall  McLaren  Craig  Lovett 

John  Griscom   Penniman  Kenneth   Monteagle 

Class  of  1915 
Paul  Everton   Peabody  Corbett  Ledlie   Moody 

Thomas  Aldrich   Gabel  Harcourt   Blades 

Lucio   Mancilla   Mintzer 


388 


Charles  Snyder            Ferd  Peterson              Russell  Graham  Ralph   Palmer              William  Lovett 

Charles  Herriott            Richard   Hill                   David    Brant  Roland  Stringham        Lyman  Grimes 

Norman  McLaren         John   Penniman             Kenneth  IHanchard      Murray  Vosburg 

Roy    Silent                     Thomas   Gabel               Howard  Fleming  Craig   Lovett                  Roy   Wallace 

Gabriel    Uuque               Ilarcourt    Blades           Lucio    Mintzer  Paul   Peabody                 Corbett   Moody 


389 


FRATERNITIES 


Phi  Kappa  Sigma 


Founded  at  the  University  of  Pennsylvania  in   1850 
Alpha  Lambda  Chapter — Established  in   1903 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 
David  Prescott  Barrows  Maurice  Edward  Harrison 

Graduate 

John  Uberto  Calkins,  Jr.  Samuel   Hamilton    Day 

*Allard  Anthony  Calkins 

Class  of  1912 
Ellis  Wing  Taylor  Harry   Newton    Rogers 

Andrew  Werner  Lawson  *Thomas   Porter  Bell 

Class  of  1913 
Arthur  Eaton  James  Wilfred  McKiNLEY 

Richard  Ray  Randall  Clare   Morse  Torrey 

James  Vernon  Short  Harold  Goldsmith  Cogswell 

Class  of  1914 

Charles  Albert  Rogers  Edward  Crossley   Lipman 

Lloyd   Wallace  Georgeson  Frank  William    Howard  Taylor 

Raymond   Stiles   Fuller  *William  Eric  Lawson 

Class  of  1915 
Darrell  Joseph   Bogardus  *Charles   Edward   Xowell 

Horace  Kenneth  Winterer  Richard  Foote  Ingram 

Harry   Lascelles   Masser  Joseph   Brittin   Sprague  Johnson 

Clinton  de  Witt 


'Absent  on  leave. 


390 


John    Calkins  Andrew   Lawson  Allard    Calkins  Ellis    Taylor 

Harry   Rogers  lames   Short  Arthur  Eaton  Thomas    Bell  Ray    Randall 

Wilfred  McKinley        Lloyd  Georgeson  Howard  Taylor  Raymond    Fuller  Harold   Cogswell 

Clare  Torrey  Harry  Masser  Charles   Nowell  Edward    Lipman  Charles    Rogers 

William   Lawson  Darrell    Bogardus  Richard    Ingram  Kennfth   Winterer 


391 


FRATERNITIES 


Acacia 

Founded  at  the  University  of  Michigan  in  1904 
California  Chapter — Established  in  1905 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Henry   Morse   Stephens  John   Agassiz    Fryer 

Russell  Tracy  Crawford  Wilson  Joseph  Wyeth 

Herman  W.  Reynolds  Richard  G.  Boone 

Carlos  G.  White 

Graduate 

Karl  Clayton  Leebrick  Walter  Erskine  Austin 

Roland  Cecil  Fay  Henry  Douglas  Bacon  Soule 

George  Fryer 

Class  of  1912 
Roland  Bendel  Christopher  Bernhardt  Fox 

*Alfred  S.  Burrill  Lee  Andrew  Sarter 

Arthur  Burton  Daly 

Class  of  1913 
*Harry   Guthrie  Hansell  *Everts  Mills 

*Harry  Neil  *Harold  Woods 

Class  of  1914 
*Lewis  Augustus  Grete  David  Nathaniel  Edwards 

*John   Mitchell  Stephenson  Harry  Hinds  Davis 

Class  of  1915 
John  Atkinson  Duncan  Frank   Philip  Brendel 


♦Absent  on  leave. 


392 


Roland    Bendel  Walter   Austin  Karl    Leebrick  Arthur    Daly- 

Roland    Fay  Alfred    P.urrill  John    Duncan 

Christopher   Fox  Tohn  Stephenson  Harry    Davis  David  Edwards 

Douglas   Soule  George   Fryer  Lewis  Grete 

393 


FRATERNITIES 


Alpha  Delta  Phi 

Founded  at  Union   College  in   1832 
California  Chapter — Established  in  1908 

MEMBERS 
Faculty 
Benjamin   Ide   Wheeler  Malcolm   Goddard 

Charles  Samuel  Howard  T.  Harper  Goodspeed 

Leonard  Bacon 

Graduate 

Frank  Stanley  Baxter 

Class  of  1912 
Ralph  Campbell  McGee  Frank  Rieber 

Ezekiel  Denman  McNear  William  Harris  Smyth 

John  Walker  Rankin  John  Homer  Woolsey 

***Wylie  Harding 
Class  of  1913 
Clyde  Leslie  Le  Baron  Leslie  Waldron   Stahl 

Harry  Charles  McClelland  Frederick  Dorsey  Stephens 

Russell  Vernon  Taylor 

Class  of  1914 
Charles  Ezekiel  Denman  Deming  Gerow  Maclise 

Ralph  Monroe  Eaton  Archibald  Cedric  Moorhead 

Lawrence  Adams  Eggleston  Francis  Harrington  Partridgi 

Harrell  Jasper  Harrell  Henry  Cushman  Breck 

Carl  Harold  Howard  Frank  William   Rubke 

Frederick  Arthur  Webster 
Class  of  1915 
John  Jeremiah  Bogardus  George  Thomas  Judd 

George  Bradford  Caswell  Robert  Augustus  Pratt  Schon 

Frank  Everett  Gillam  Karl  Hugo  Kraght  Visscher 

William  Bonine  Hubbard  Benjamin  Webb  Wheeler 

Edmund  John  Young 


•♦♦Graduated   1911. 

394 


Ralph   McGee 
Dorsey   Stephens 
Ralph    Eaton 
Frank   Rubke 
John   Bogardus 
George  Caswell 


Homer   Woolsey 
1  K'nman    McNear 
Cedric    Moorhead 
Deming   Maclise 
Ilarrell    Harrell 
Robert    Schon 


William    Smyth 
Harry    McClelland 
Russell    Taylor 
Frank  Partridge 
George  Judd 
Frank  Gillam 


John   Rankin  Prank    Baxter 

Wylie   Harding  Clyde    Le    Baron 

Leslie  Stahl  -  Charles  Denman 

Henry    lircck  Carl   Howard 

Lawrence  "Eggleston  Ed    Young 

William    Hubbard  Benjamin  Wheeler 


395 


FRATERNITIES 


Phi  Sigma  Kappa 

Founded  at  Massachusetts  Agricultural  College  in   1873 

Omega  Chapter — Established  in   1909 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Herbert  Ellsworth  Cory  Farnham  P.  Griffiths 

Ralph  E.  Smith 

Graduate 

Joseph  Dale  Neuls  Homer   Carlton    Seaver 

Class  of  1912 
Elton  Ralph  Charvoz  Donald    Houston    Graham 

David  Gustave  William   Christen  Herbert  Charles  Kelly 
Beverly   Stuart  Clendenin  James  Frederick   Pollard 

Clinton  William  Evans  Kenneth  William  Robarts 

Daniel  Joseph   Flanigan  Stephen   Carson   Whipple 

Class  of  1913 
Edward   Ives   Beeson  Roy  Elliot  Campbell 

*Roscoe  Lester  Berglund  Hiram   Lambert   Ricks,  Jr. 

Earl   Browning   Rowley 
Class  of  1914 
Claude  Cha.<les   Brown  James  Arthur  Giacomini 

Rolla   Bishop  Watt  Floyd  Bloomer  Rice 

*Linton   Andrae   Fulton  Harold  J.  Bruhns 

Joseph   Hartford   Moore  Mansel   Perry   Griffiths 

James  Mainwaring  Douglas  Springer   Fulton   Evans 

Raymond  Earl  Nebelung 

Class  of  1915 

Harry    Wilson    Beckett  Horace  Xevil  Heisen 

Ralph  Edwin  Beckett  Robert   Horton   Peddycord 

*Sydney  Easley   Boyd  Laclair   Davidson   Schulze 

Desmond  Monroe  Teeter  Lewis  Harding  Moore 

George  Roeth,  Jr.  Paul  Soule  Wetmore 

Rufus  Frederick  Young  Homer    Hurlburt    Coolidge 
♦Absent  on  leave. 


396 


David    Christen      Herbert   Kelly 
Stephen    Whipple  Donald   Graham 
Roy    Campbell        Hiram  Ricks 
Joseph    Moore        Rolla  Watt 
Robert  Peddycord  George   Roeth 
Sydney    Boyd  Homer    Coolidge 


Clinton   Evans         Joseph   Neuls  Homer    Seaver  Fred  Pollard 

Kenneth    Roberts    Beverly   ClendeninEdward   Benson  Roscoe    Berglund 

Ralph   Charvoz       Harold  Bruhns       Earl    Rowley  Claude   Brown 

Mansel    Griffiths     James   Giacomini     James  "Douglas  Springer   Evans 

Harry    Beckett         Lewis    Moore  Ralph    Beckett  Desmond   Teeter 

Le    Clair    Schulze  Paul  Wetmore         Rufus   Young  Horace  Heisen 


397 


FRATERNITIES 


Pi  Kappa  Phi 

Founded  at  Charleston  College  in  1904 
California  Gamma  Chapter — Established  in  1909 

MEMBERS 

Class  of   1912 
Arba  John  Matthews  Stephen  Malatesta 

David   Phillip  Hardy  Clarence  Lynne  Fraser 


Class  of  1913 


Frank  Lawrence  Stack 
Arthur  Wilmer  Haslam 
Walter  Charles   Smallwood 
Denair  Adams  Butler 
James  Boyd  Oliver 


*Walter  Wallace  Hughes 
James  Blair  Church 

*Benjamin  Thomas  Laflin 
James  Buford  Wright 
William   James   Barnhill 


James  Fulton  Shafer 

Class  of  1914 
George  Edgar  Armstrong  William  Martin  Gwynn 

Elbert  McSherry  Brown  *Philip  Wadsworth  Hubbard 

Orrin  S.  Cook  Charles  Edward  Manley 

Paul  August  Starke 

Class  of  1915 

*Harold   Leland   Cummings  William  Vinton   Miller 

Melville  James  Paulsen  Herbert  Hardy 


'Absent  on  leave. 


398 


wmmmmBsmmmm 


John   Matthews  Clarence   Fraser  Frank    Stack  David   Hardy 

Stephen   Malatesta        James    Shafer  James    Church  William    Barnhill  Walter   Hughes 

Arthur    Haslam  Walter  Smallwood         Benjamin    Laflin  Boyd  Oliver 

James   Wright  Denair   Butler  Paul    Starke  Orrin    Cook 

Charles    Manley  William   Gwynn  George    Armstrong       Philip    Hubbard  Elbert  Brown 

Harold    Cummings        Melville  Paulsen  Herbert   Hardy  William    Miller 


399 


FRATERNITIES 


Theta  Xi 

Founded  at  Rensselaer  Polytechnic  Institute  in  1864 
Nu  Chapter — Established  in  1910 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 
William  James  Raymond  Ralph   Archibald  White 

Adolphus  James  Eddy 

College  of  Dentistry 

Leland  Stanford  Jones 

Graduate 

Adolphus  James  Eddy 

Class  of  1912 

Harold   Godfrey  Adams  Tom  Allen  Bither 

Charles  William  Claudius  Harry  Heywood  House 

Reuben  Ray  Irvine  Chesley  Ellis  Osborn 

Nathan  Tapley  Putnam  George  Jenner  Wheat 

Class  of  1913 
Donald  McCord  Baker  James  Farrand  Ball 

Ervin  Henry  Clausen  Ralph  Waldo  Coane 

Edgar  Ludwig  Hughes  Raymond  William  Jeans 

Chauncey  Lester  Reed 

Class  of  1914 
Fred  Alfred  Beik  Robert  Bragg  Cumming 

Bert  Roland  Deleray  Leon  Edison  Rushton 

Ralph  Gilbert  Wadsworth  Clarence  William   Westbrook 

Arthur  Clarence  Felt  Herman   Bryant  Henderson 

Class  of  1915 

Henry  Clare  Beebe  Carrol   Monton   Fulkreth 

Roy  Dewitt  McCullough 


400 


Leland  Jones 


James   Eddy 


Harold    Adams 


Charles  Claudius 


Reuben  Irvine  George    Wheat  Nathan    Putnam         Tom    Bither  Chesley   Osborn 

Harry   House  Chauncey    Reed  Krvin   Clausen  Ralph   Coane  Raymond   Jeans 

Edgar    Hughes  Donald    Baker  Clarence   Westbrookjames   Ball  Bert   Deleray 

William    Lewis  Ralph   Wadsworth  Arthur   Felt  Robert  Cummins  Fred  Beik 


Leon  Rushton 


Henry   Beebe 


Carrol   Fulkerth        Roy  McCullough 


401 


FRATERNITIES 


Sigma  Phi  Epsilon 

Founded  at  Richmond  College  in  1901 
California  Alpha  Chapter — Established  in  1910 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 

*  Robert  Leroy  Flannery 

California  School  of  Design 
Percy  Augustus  Dickel 

Class  of  1912 

Edwin  Allen  Abeel  Charles  Allen  Anderson 

Robert   Thomas   Aitken  Ulysses   Sheldon   Attix 

Class  of  1913 
William   Frederick  Ball.  Jr.  Arnold  Clemens  Dickel 

Donald   Comfort    Bennett  *Jesse  Roy  Xewton 

**Allen   Cleveland   Phelps 

Class  of  1914 
Guy   Barker  Earl  Raymond  Crabbe 

Oscar  Bailey  Ernest   S.   Schweninger 

Henry  Crawford  Comptox  Lewis   Switzer 

Harrington   Wii.i.son   Cochran  Carl  Louis  Thiele 

Class  of  1915 
Ebbe  Adolph  Brellin  Jesse  Newton  Holden 

George  I.  Dawson  Francis   Max  Gardner 

Henry  Atherton  Lee 


♦Absent   on   leave.  ** Affiliated. 

402 


Edwin   Abeel  Ulysses  Attix  Robert    Flaanery  Charles  Anderson 

Robert   Aitken  Jesse    Newton  Arnold    Dickel  William    Ball  Donald    Bennett 

Guy    Barker  Carl    Thiele  Harrington   Cochran  Lewis   Switzer 

Ernest  Schweninger     Henry  Compton  Francis   Gardner  Karl  Crabbe  Jesse   Ilolden 

Oscar    Bailey  Henry   Lee  Ebbe    Brelin  Cieorge  Dawson 


403 


FRATERNITIES 


'K 


Delta  Chi 

Founded   at    Cornell   University   in    1890 
California   Chapter — Established  in   1910 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Thomas  Harrison   Reed 

Graduate 

Warren    Hobart    Pillsbury  Allen  Ray  Grinstead 

Clifton  Edgar  Brooks  George  Arm  stead  Work 

Hugh   Samuel  O'Neill  Laurence  Nicol 


Milo  Rees  Robbins 


Class  of  1912 

Lyston     So  Relle  Black 


Class  of  1913 
James   Roy   Douglas  Jesse  Weldon  O'Neill 

Class  of  1914 
*John  Christie  Anderson  Elmer  Lacey  Shirrell 

James  Davis  Marcus  Arthur  Wolff  Lee 

Joseph  Hayford  Quire 

Class  of  1915 
John   Nelson   James  Cornelius  Ferry  Hatch 

Richard   Henry   Chamberlain  Hawley   Ellason   Strong 

Herbert  Hartley  Hope  J.   Bernard  Frisbie 

George  Lukens   Collins  Frederick  William  Kant 


*  Absent  on  leave. 


404 


Warren    Pillsbury         Ray  (Jrinstead  George    Work  Hugh   O'Neill 

Clifton    Brooks  Lawrence   Nicol  Jesse    O'Neill  Roy    Douglas 

Milo   Robbins  Lyston    Black  James    Davis  Herbert  Hope  George  Collins 

Marcus    Lee  Elmer   Shirrell  Bernard   Frisbie  Richard  Chamberlain 

John  James  Hawley   Strong  Ferry  Hatch 


405 


PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


Phi  Delta  Phi 

Founded  at  University  of  Michigan  in  1869 

Pomeroy  Chapter — Established  at  Hastings  College  of  Law  in   1883; 

Extended  to  Department  of  Jurisprudence  at  Berkeley  in  1908 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 
Hastings  College  of  Law 


Dr.    Edward    Robeson    Taylor 


Richard   C.   Harrison 


Robert   Waite   Harrison 


Department  of  Jurisprudence  at  Berkeley 


William   Carey  Jones 
George   Henry    Boke 
Joseph    M.    Chamberlain 
Farnham  Pond  Griffiths 


Orrin   Kip  McMurray 
Alexander  Marsden  Kidd 
Matthew    Christopher   Lynch 
Maurice    Edward   Harrison 


ACTIVE  MEMBERS 
Hastings  College  of  Law 


Leroy  Vernon  Hitchcock 
Albert  Loyola  Whittle 
Albert   Michelson 


Burton    Byron    Brace 


Class  of  1912 


Reginald   Crawford   Ramsay 
Kingslf.y  Warren  Cannon 
Raymond    Alfred    Dorey 


Class  of  1913 

James  William   Ryan 


Class  of  1914 


George  Waldo  Weeks,  Jr. 


Department  of  Jurisprudence  at  Berkeley 


Samuel    Hamilton    Day 
Clyde  Holm  an   Brand 
John  Uberto  Calkins,  Jr. 


Graduate 

*George  Alfred  Haines 
•Allard  Anthony  Calkins 
Raymond  Wilson  Hays 
Arvin   Benjamin    Shaw,   Jr. 


Class  of  1912 


*Watt   Willis  Clinch 
Morse  Adams  Cartwright 
Joe   Goodrich    Sweet 
Beverly    Stuart    Clendenin 


Robert  Hazeltine  Clark 
Newton   Bishop  Drury 
Arthur   Winfield  Taylor 
Herman    Horatius    Phleger 


•Absent  on  leave. 


407 


PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


Phi  Alpha  Delta 

Jackson  Temple  Chapter — Established  in  1911 
Hastings  College  of  Law 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Louis  T.  Hengstler 

Class  of  1912 
Henry  K.  de  Jarnette  Emil  R.  Hoerchner 


Lawrence   Edwards 
Oscar  W.   Hilton 


George  H.   Cavalier 
Albert  E.  Carter 
Herbert   Chamberlin 
Cyrus  Croop 


Cornelius  W.  Kelly 
Eric  G.  Scudder 
Glenn  West 

Class  of  1913 

John  F.  Dorgeloh 
Walter  E.  Hettman 
Jerome   B.   Kavanau<;h 
Ray  J.  O'Brien 


Asm  us  F.  Patterson 

Class  of  1914 

Thomas  B.  Dozier  Blaine  McGowan 

Ward  G  Rush 


408 


Oscar  Hilton  Eric   Scudder  Henry   de  Jarnette 

Lawrence   Edwards       Glenn    West  Herbert   Chamberlain  Cornelius    Kelly 

John  Dorgeloh  George    Cavalier  Emil   Hoerchner  Walter  Hettman  Albert   Carter 

Asmus  Patterson  Cyrus    Croop  Ray    O'Brien  Ward   Rush 

Thomas   Dozier  Blaine   McGowan  Jerome   Kavanaugh 


409 


PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


Alpha  Kappa  Kappa 

Founded  at  Dartmouth  College  in  1888 
Sigma  Chapter — Established  in  1899 

MEMBERS 

Class  of  1912 
SAMUEL   ELLSWORTH   Bailey  Dewey    Robert   Powell 

Ernest   Winton    Cleary  Clifford   Daniel   Sweet 

Carl  Leslie  Hoag  Herbert    Everett    Long 


Daniel  Irwin  Aller 


Class  of  1913 

Charles   Lee   Tranter 


Class  of  1914 

Roy   Charles   Abbott  George   Warren    Pierce 

Benjamin   Marsh  Frees  Fred  Nicholas   Scatena 

Melville   Hammond  Long  William   Goodrkke  Donald 

Edward  Cline  Bull  George  Arneke  Kretsinger 

Class  of  1915 

Elton  Ralph  Charvoz  Clair   Fanning   Gelston 

Homer  Carlton  Seaver  Harold  Lund  Jensen 


410 


Samuel  Bailey  Clifford  Sweet  Dewey    Powell  Ernest  Cleary 

Carl  Hoag  Herbert  Long  Charles  Tranter 

Benjamin   Frees  Edward  Bull  Daniel    Aller  Melville  Long 

Roy  Abbot  Clair   Gelston  George  Pierce 

411 


PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


Nu  Sigma  Nu 

Founded  at  University  of  Michigan  in  1882 
Phi  Chapter— Established  in  1900 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Thomas  Huntington  Ernest  Hoag 

William  Breakey  Lewitt  Milton  Lennon 

Charles  Von  Hoffman  Paul  Castelhun 

Wallace   Irving  Terry  Tracy  Russel 

George  Frederick  Reinhardt  Edgar  Alexander 

Frederick  Gay  Richard   Harvey 

Glanville  Rusk  J.  G.  Fitzgerald 

Class  of  1912 
Frank  Lewis  Kelley  Henry  Chesley  Bush 

Class  of  1913 
Earl  Hamilton  Cornell 

Class  of  1914 
Hugh  Kling  Berkeley  Albert  Holmes  Rowe 

Frank   Stanley   Baxter 

Class  of  1915 

John   Morse  Rehfisch  Cyrus  Eugene  Van  Deventer 

Jay  Marion  Read  William  John  Kerr 

John  Homer  Woolsey  Fred  Herman  Kruse 

William  P.  Hume 


412 


Earl  Cornell  Albert    Rowe  William    Kerr 

Hugh    Berkeley  Prank   Baxter 

Marion    Read  Fred    Kruse  William  Huiiu- 

Walter    Kelley  John    Rehfisch 


413 


PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


Delta  Sigma  Delta 

Founded  at  the  University  of  Michigan  in  1882 

Zeta  Chapter— Established  in  1890 

MEMBERS 

Fratres  in  Faculate 


James  Graham  Sharp 
William  Fuller  Sharp 
Herbert  T.  Moore 
Sherrell  W.  Hall 


Roscoe  A.  Day 
Allen  Holman  Suggett 
Henry  M.  Elberg 
William   M.   Mason 


Malcolm  Goddard 

Fratres  in  Clinico 
Leander  Van  Orden  R.  W.  Rule 

George   N.   Van   Orden  Clarke  C.   McQuaid 

Class  of  1912 

Louis  Walker  Layne  Lincoln  P.- Van  Orden 

Class  of  1913 

George  Willis  Faught  James  Alexander  Cunha 

Ovid  Scott  Tuttle  Daniel  George  Bisson 

Harry  Alfred  Tuckey 

Class  of  1914 
Homer  Lash  Sams  Edward  Barbour 

Henry  Clay  Petray  Leland  Stanford  Jones 

Theodore  Carl  Muegge  Arthur  Alfred  de  Carvalho 

Eldridge  L.  Hicok  William  Berry  Sullivan 


414 


■■■■■^^■■^B 


Louis   Layne  Ovid   Tuttle  Harry  Tuckey  Lincoln  Van  Orden 

James  Cunha  Eldridge  Hicok  Theodore  Muegge 

Leland   Jones  George  Faught  Daniel  Bisson  Henry  Petray 

William  Sullivan  Homer   Sams  Edward  Barbour 


415 


PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


Xi  Psi  Phi 

Founded  at  the  University  of  Michigan  in  1889 
Iota  Chapter— Established  in  1895 


416 


MEMBERS 
Faculty 


Joseph   Dupuy  Hodgen 
John  Burnside  Tufts 
George  Lusk  Bean 
Guy  Stillman  Milberry 
Louis  Graham 


Otto  P.  Roller 
Samuel  William  Hussey 
Samuel  Steen   Maxwell 
F.   Burton  Kenward 
Melvine  Thayer  Rhodes 


Class  of  1912 


Frank  Parsons  Burton 
August  C.  Nor 


Bernard  Charles  Murray 
Alfred  Emanuel  Bernstein 


Class  of   1913 
Arthur  M.  Brown  Edward  Ives   Beeson 

Harold  John  Bruhns  Floyd  Bloomer  Rice 

Charles  Bernard  Musante  Thornton  Craig 

Vance  Wilbur  Bliss  Evans  C.  Varner 

Class  of  1914 
Dolan  Felix  Herd  Fred  Newton  Eaton 

Dickson  Gabriel  Bell  Delos  Bardellini 

Herbert  Pkrcival  Peck  Rein  hart  Walter  McCluskey 

Arthur  Barr  Emmett  Nicholson  Britton 

Harold  Agler  Bo  alt 


Edward  Beeson  August    Nor  Frank     Burton  Alfred    Bernstein 

Bernard    .Murray  Kvans    Vainer  Thornton   Craig  Charles   Musante 

Floyd   Rice  Arthur     Brown  Emmett    Britton  Arthur  Barr  Harold    Bruhns 

Harold    B.oalt  Herbert   Peek  Dickson  Bell  Fred    Eaton 

1'olan    Herd  Deloa     liardellini  Walter  McCluskey 


417 


PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


'gtm 


Psi  Omega 

Founded  at  Baltimore  College  of  Dental  Surgery  in  1892 
Beta   Delta    Chapter— Established   in   1903 

MEMBERS 
Faculty 


Henry  Benjamin  Carey 
George  Rucian  Hubbell 
Adelbert  Watts  Lee 


Saxon  Bird  Scott 
Stanley  L.  Dod 
Robert  E.  Keyes 


Henry  E.  Rudee 

Class  of  1912 

Charles  Lucius  Daingerfield  Earl  Leo  McGlashan 

Frederick  Eugene  Kelley  Jacob  Frederick  Steffan 

Frederick  Wilbur  Wilson 


Class  of  1913 


Francis  Eugene  Derham 
Clarence  Alexander  Flanagan 
Oliver  Ambrose  Haberdier 
William  Henry  Hanford 
Robert  Bliss  Howell 


Howard   Buckley  Kirtland 
Cassius  Mitchel  Rowe 
William  Edgar  Ross 
Francis  Vance  Simonton 
Edgar  Wright  Snell 


Sherman  Aloysius  White 


418 


Class  of  1914 


Raymond  Elmer  Brownell 
Henry  Otto  Eggert 
David  Edwards 


Wilke  Richard  Renwick 
William  Ernest  Rideout 
Edgar  Frederick  Swartz 


Robert   Howell  Earl    McGlashan  Charles  Daingerfield     Frederick   Wilson 

Jacob    Steffan  Edgar    Snell  Sherman  White  Cassius  Rowe 

William  Hanford  Frederick  Kelley  Henry   Eggert  Clarence  Flanagan        Francis   Simonton 

Oliver   Haberdier  Francis   Derham  William   Rideout  Raymond     Brownell 

William  Ross  Edgar   Swartz  Wilke    Renwick  Howard  Kirtland 


419 


PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


Phi  Delta  Chi 


College  of  Pharmacy 

Founded  at   the   University   of   Michigan    in    1883 
Zeta  Chapter — Established  in   1902 

MEMBERS 
Faculty 


Albert   Schneider 
Franklin   Theodore  Green 
Henry  Benjamin  Corey 

Active 
Archie  Ballard  Davison 
Clyde  Corenth  Mooers 
Leroy  Roderick  Xish 
Alfred  Frederick  Hemphill 
Alaric  Garfield  Steelman 
Safford  Anthony  Hjelte 
John  Reseigh 
Irving  Lawrence  Nason 
William  Henry  Davisson 
Cethil  Jones 
Raymond  George  Poppe 
Bert  Joseph  McDonough 
Clare  James  Doran 


Frederick    Xish 

Haydn    Mozart    Simmon: 

Harley  Rupert  Wiley 

Members 

Perry  Bruce  Clark 
Frank  E.  Gibbs 
Roy  C.  Gililland 
Albert  J.  Lewek 
Wilbur  E.  Tice 
John  J.  Roach 
William  M.  Cordivex us 
S.  David  Grove 
Clifton  P.  Rose 
Carroll  G.  Waterman 
G.  Stanley  Young 
C.  Leon  Weaver 
Walter  R.  Creighton 


420 


Stanley     Young              Carroll    Waterman         Alfred     Hemphill            Leon    Weawer  Clifton    Rose 

Clyde    Mooers                 Safford    Hjelte               John     Reseigh                  Irving    Xason  . Marie    Steelman 

Archie  Davison               Roy    Gililland                  Walter  Creisrhton           Perry  Clark 

Frank    Gibbs                    Cethil   Jones                     Leroy    Nish                        David    Grove  Kavmond    Poppe 

William    Daisson             Berl    McDonough           Albert    T.ewek                  Clare     Borftn  Wilbur  Tice 


421 


PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


Kappa  Psi 

Founded  at  Wilmington,  Delaware,  in  1879 
Beta  Gamma  Chapter — Established  in  1909 

Active  Members 

Bert  O.  Pennington  Morris  Pruess 

Lloyd  J.  Hume  Wm.  M.  Molitor 

Geo.  A.  Doan  Fred  S.  Lawhead 

boliver  jurado  gus  claassen 

Oscar  Claassen  Lee  Roy  Carlisle 

Geo.  J.  Moore  Joe  Dessel 

Geo.  H.  Frates  Earl  E.  White 

Louis  Ff.  Leibe  Phillips  H.  Crimmins 

Orville  B.  Hunt  Edison  E.  Hilby 
'                           Harry  B.  Rooney 


422 


Joe   Dessel  Louis   Leibe  Edwin  Hilby 

William  Molitor  Harry   Rooney  George   Frates  Morris   Pruess 

John  Moore  Oscar  Claassen  Burton   Pennington     Phil   Crimmins  Orville  Hunt 

James  Hume  Gus    Claassen  George  Doan  Earl   White 

Fred   Lawhead  LeRoy    Carlisle  Bolivar    Jurado 


423 


PROFESSIONAL  FRATERNITIES 


Phi  Chi 

Medical 
Founded  at  University  of  Vermont  in  1886 
Pi  Delta  Phi  Chapter— Established  in  1909 

MEMBERS 
Faculty 


Henry  H.  Lessner 
P.  K.  Johnson 
Wm.  Henry  Dudley 


Adolph  Tyroler 
Harry   Montgomery 
Irving   R.   Bancroft 


Charles  Lewis  Allen 


ACTIVE   MEMBERS 


Norman   Augustus   Leake 
Albert    Osben    Holmes 
Carl  Gechburn   Reum 
Chesley    Lightbourn    Evans 
Clarence   Sumner  Compton 
Lawrence  Ewald  Lepper 
Robert  G.  Sharp 


Eben  James  Carey 
Paul   William    Christman 
Robert   Stanton   Sherman 
Edward   Salomon 
Eugene   Howard   Barbera 
Lynn  Newton  Hart 
Leon  Walter  Miner 


424 


Fraternities  in  the  Academic  Colleges 

Of    the    University    of    California 


FRATERNITY 


CHAPTER 


Zeta    Psi    

Chi    Phi 

Delta   Kappa   Epsilon. 

Beta  Theta  Pi 

Phi  Gamma  Delta.... 

Phi    Delta    Theta 

Sigma  Chi    

Sigma  Nu    

Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon. 

Chi    Psi    

Kappa  Alpha   

Delta  Upsilon    

Delta   Tau    Delta 

Phi   Kappa   Psi 

Alpha  Tau  Omega. . . . 

Theta    Delta    Chi 

Kappa  Sigma  

Psi   Upsilon    

Phi  Kappa  Sigma    . . . 

Alpha   Delta   Phi ..... 
Phi    Sigma   Kappa.... 

Pi  Kappa   Phi 

Delta  Chi    

Sigma    Phi   Epsilon .  .  . 
Theta  Xi 


Iota    

Lambda    , 

Theta  Zeta    

Omega    , 

Delta  Xi    

California   Alpha 

Alpha  Beta 

Beta    Psi    

California    Beta 

Alpha  Delta  Delta 

Alpha  Xi 

California    

Beta   Omega 

California    Gamma 

California   Gamma  Iota. 

Delta   Deuteron , 

Beta    Xi 

Epsilon   

Alpha   Lambda 

He 

California    

Omega    

California    Gamma 

California    

California    Alpha 

Nu   


1870 

1875 

1876 

1879 
1881-1886 
1872-1886 

1886 

1892 

1894 

1895 

1895 

1896 

1898 

1899 

1900 

1900 

1901 

1902 

1903 

1905 

1908 

1909 

1909 

1910 

1910 

1910 


ACTIVE 
MEMBERS 

22 
13 
14 
20 
26 
26 
27 
21 
26 
19 
21 
24 
19 
23 
21 
18 
27 
28 
22 
12 
33 
?>7 
22 
22 
22 
27 


Total  Fraternities 26 


Total  Active  Members. 


.602 


Sororities  in  the  Academic  Colleges 

Of    the    University    of    California 


Kappa   Alpha   Theta <  Omega 

Gamma  Phi  Beta Eta     . . 


Kappa   Kappa   Gamma . 

Delta  Delta  Delta 

Pi  Beta  Phi 

Alpha    Phi    

Chi    Omega 


Alpha    Omicron    Pi '  Sigma 


Delta  Gamma 
Alpha  Chi  Omega 
Alpha  Xi  Delta  . . 
Sigma  Kappa  .... 


Pi    

Pi    ....... 

California 
Lambda  . 
Mu    


FOUNDED 


Beta. 


Gamma    .  . 
Pi    ....... 

California 
Lambda    . 


1890 
1894 
1880-1897 
1900 
1900 
1901 
1902 
1907 
1907 
1909 
1909 
1910 


ACTIVE 
MEMBERS 


33 
32 
34 
28 
30 
27 
20 
34 
28 
29 
23 
21 


Total   Sororities 12 


Total  Active   Members 339 


425 


HONOR    SOCIETIES 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Golden  Bear 

Senior    Honor    Society — Established    in    1901 
MEMBERS 


Honorary 


Benjamin*    Ide   Wheeler 
Eugene    Waldemar    Hilgard 
Albert   Bonnheim 


Charles  Mills  Gayley 
Henry    Morse    Stephens 


Faculty 


William   Carey  Jones 
Horace   A.    Davis 
Arthur   W.    Foster 


Edward   James    Wickson 
Chauncey    Wetmore    Wells 


Alumni  Members  Associated  With  the  University 


Victor   Hendricks   Henderson 
George  Cunningham  Edwards 
Alexander   Marsden   Kidd 
Monroe    Emanuel    Deutsch 
James   Kennedy   Moffitt 
Martin    Charles    Flaherty 
Charles  Stetson  Wheeler 
Robert   Sirley 
Edmond    O'Neill 
Max   Thelen 
Harry  Beal  Torrey 
Warren   Olney,  Jr. 


Farnham  Pond  Griffiths 
James  Sutton 
Ralph    Palmer    Merritt 
Milton    Thomas   Farmer 
Irving   Grover    Markwart 
Lincoln   Hutchinson 
William   Henry   Greenlaw, 
James   Garfield    Schaeffer 
Thomas   Milton   Putnam 
Guy   Chaffee  Earl 
Maurice   Edward   Harrison 


Ik. 


Graduates 


George   Armistead  Work 
John  Uberto  Calkins,  Jr. 


Harold   Harrison   Ashley 
William  Goodricke  Donald 
Karl    Clayton    Leebrick 


•GEORGE    Alfred    Haines 
George   Arneke   Kretsinger 
*Burton   Alexander   Swartz 
*Arthur    Curtis   Prendergast 
David   Phillip   Hardy 
*Jay   Dwiggins,   Jr. 
*Charles  Warren   Pauly 
Joseph    Goodrich    Sweet 
Amos    William    Elliott 
Chester   Arthur    Allen 
James    Byers    Black 
*Charles   Le   Roy   Butler 
Morse  Adams  Cartwright 
Ernest  George  Clewe 


Class  of  1912 

Newton  Bishop  Drury 
Edwin    Moritz   Einstein 
Harry    G.    Gabbert 
Raymond  Clifford  Ingram 
Herbert  Charles  Kelley 
Ralph  Campbell  McGee 
Laurel  Revel  Miller 
Carl  Albert  Phleger 
Herman    Horatius    Phleger 
John    Robertson   Quinn 
Roy   Lothrop    Shurtleff 
Edward   Louis   Watts 
Le   Roy  Walton  Allen 
Monroe  Lincoln   Dinkelspiel. 
Lester  Seward  Ready 


'Degree   conferred    Dec.,    1911. 


428 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Winged  Helmet 

Junior    Honor   Society — Established   in    1901 


MEMBERS 


President   Benjamin   Ide  Wheeler 
Professor  Charles    Oilman    Hyde 
Professor   Armin    Otto   Leuschnek 
Professor  Chauncey  W.   Wells 
Professor  James  Turney  Allen 
Professor  Edward  Bull  Clapp 
Professor  Leon  Josiah  Richardson 
Professor   Milton  Thomas  Putnam 


Faculty 


Professor   Wm.   Conger   Morgan 
Professor  Grover    Chester   Noble 
Professor  Lincoln  Hutchinson 
Professor  Richard  Fred.  Scholz 
Professor   Donald  Eugene   Smith 
Mr.  James  Sutton 
Mr.    Max    Tiielen 
Dk.    Maurice    Edward   Harrison 


Milton   Thomas   Farmer 


Graduates 


William    Goodricke    Donald 


*George  Alfred  Haines 


Class  of  1912 


Chester  Arthur  Allen 
*Charles   Le   Roy   Butler 
Morse  Adams   Cartwright 
Robert  Hazeltine   Clark- 
Newton  Bishop  Drury 
Harry  Gabbert 
Raymond  Clifford  Ingram 
Herbert  Charles  Kelly 
Ralph    Campbell    McGee 


Carl    Albert   Phleger 
Herman  Horatius  Phleger 
Roy    I.othrop    Shurtleff 
Edward    Louis   Watts 
Amos    William    Elliott 
** Ernest  George  Clewe 
Laurel   Revel  Miller 
Chas.    Stetson    Wheeler,   Jr. 


Fred    Harold    Allen- 
Edward   Ives  Beeson 
Harry  Homer  Wood 
John    Lowrey   Simpson 
Edgar  Francis    Sullivan 
John   Allen    Stroud,   Jr. 
Laird    Monterey    Morris 


Class  of  1913 

Stirling  Benjamin  Peart  Raymond  Moffett  Hill 

Wilfred   Melton   Forker  Richard   Whitney    Rust 

Lewis  Morris   Foulke  Milton   Kerr  Campbell,   Jr. 

*Jack  Jerome  Alexander  Henry  Armstrong  Stern 

Harry   Charles  McClelland  Clare  Morse  Torrey 

Arthur   Eaton  Robert   Gordon    Sproul 

Roy   Arthur  Silent  William   Norris  King 
Lyman    Grimes 


*Absent  on   leave. 


'Graduated  Dec,   1911. 


429 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Skull  and  Keys 

Senior  and  Junior  Honor  Society 
Established  in   1892 


MEMBERS 
Faculty 

Martin   Charles   Flaherty 
Edmond   O'Neill 
Thomas  Frederick   Sanford 
William  Albert  Setchell 


Henry  Morse  Stephens 
Walter  Magee 
George  Smithson 
Benjamin   Ide   Wheeler 


Class  of 

John   Wheelwright  Barnett 
James  Byers  Black 
Robert    Spencer   Currey 
Howard  Thomas   Douglas 
Amos  William  Elliott 
Harry  G.  Gabbert 
George  Dinsmore  Hansen 
Raymond  William   Hawley 
Ralph  Brooks  High 
Raymond   Clifford   Ingram 
Gerald  Driscoll  Kennedy 
Harry   Rodgers   Lawton 

*  William  Edw 


1912 

John  Joseph  Parker 

**Charles  Warren  Pauly 

Carl  Albert  Phelger 

Herman  Horatious  Phelger 

*Clarence  Merle  Price 

Thomas  Briggs  Rice 

**Walter  Hugo  Schroeder 

**Burton  Albert  Swartz 

Thomas   William    Veitch 
**Edwin  Scott  Walker 
Edward  Louis  Watts 
Charles   Kenneth   White 
ard  zuill 


Class  of  1913 


William   Landon   Bagby 
*  David  Otto  Brant 
William  Wilson  Gay 
Lewis  Morris  Foulke 
Charles    William    Heyer,  Jr. 
William   Norris  King 


Sterling  Benjamin   Peart 
Henry  Armstrong  Stern 
John  Allen   Stroud,  Jr. 

*Fargo  Fenton   Rose 
Murray  Slauson  Vosburg 

*Rollo   Clark   Wheeler 


'Absent    on    leave. 


*Oliver   Creighton   Wyllie 

'Graduated    Dec.,    1911. 


430 


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431 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


ONE 


Theta  Nu  Epsilon 

Zeta  Chapter — Established  in  1881 

MEMBERS 
Honorary 

Garrett  Cochran  Addison  W.  Kelly 

Arthur  Charles  Nahl  George  Lyell  Cadwalader 

Walter  Christy  George  A.  Smithson 

William  James  Howe 
Class  of  1912 


Stanley  Demalayne  Cowden 
Howard  Thomas  Douglas 
William  Edward  Zuill 
Edward  Louis  Watts 
Ernest  George  Clewe 
James  Byers  Black 
Albert  John  Evers 
Arne  Bours  Knud  Hoisholt 


John   Wheelwright   Barnett 
Frank  Samuel  Hudson 
George  Gross  Harlowe 
Robert  Spencer  Currey 
Irwin  Campbell  Berry 
Samuel  Gerrit  Wight 
Harry   Rogers   Lawton 
Henry  Hiram  Ray 


Class  of  1913 


John  Allen  Stroud,  Jr. 
Oscar  Sargent  Norton 
Rollo  Clark  Wheeler 
Oliver  Creighton  Wyllie 
William    Raymond   Martin 
Meredith   Parker 


Harold  Cushman  Lewis 
David  Otto  Brant 
Murray  Slauson  Vosburg 
John  Thomas  Gribner 
Charles  Wade  Snook 
Lewis  Morris  Foulke 


Class  of  1914 


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432 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Mask  and  Dagger 

Dramatic  Honor  Society 

MEMBERS 

Class  of  1912 
Ernest  George  Clewe  Charlotte  Kett 

John  W.  Rankin 

Class  of  1913 
Barbara   Nachtrieb  Roy  Arthur  Silent 

Class  of  1914 
Lurita  Stone 

Class  of  1915 

Gladstone  Wilson 


433 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Torch  and  Shield 

Founded  in  1907 

MEMBERS 

Class  of  1909 

Violet  Ottoman 


Leila   McKibben 


Elda  Eggert 
Ruth  Fuller 
Rose  Gardner 


Class  of  1910 

Marguerite  Ogden 

Class  of  1911 

Jennett  Miller 
Cheryl  Merrill  Scholz 
Mabel  Sadler 
Margaret  Witter 


434 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Prytanean 


MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Miss  Lucy   Sprague  Dr.  Jessica  Peixotto 

Miss  Lucy  Stebbins  Dr.  Romilda   Paroni 

Miss  Ethel  Sherman 


Marguerite  Ogden 
Rose  Gardner 
Elba  Eggert 
Mabel  Sadler 
Margaret  Witter 


Florence  E.  Doyle 
Dorothy  C.  Fish 
Mildred  M.  Jordan 
Edith  E.  Pence 
Alice  L.  Andrews 
Mary  B.  Chase 
Marion  Gay 
Mary  G.   Hamilton 
Anna  R.  Kidder 


Katherine  Carlton 
May  Christal 


Graduates 

Katherine  Asher 
Ethel  Burke 
Anne  Hunt 
Hazel  B.  Jordan 
Georgie  Del  McCoy 
Jennett  L.  Miller 

Class  of  1912 

Dolores  Bradley 
Alice  M.   Hiestand 
Mildred  Porter 
Doris  C.  Spencer 
Caroline  Teichert 
Reid  Venable 
Catherine  Walker 
Grace  Weeks 
Penelope  Murdoch 

Class  of  1913 

Harriet  Judd 
Barbara  Nachtrieb 
Amy  M.  Waite 


435 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Sword  and  Scales 

Honor  Society  of  the  Department  of  Jurisprudence 

MEMBERS 
Faculty 


William  Carey  Jones 
Orrin  Kipp  McMurray 
Alexander  M.   Kidd 
George  H.  Boke 


J.  P.  Chamberlain 
Farnham   P.   Griffiths 
Lester  H.  Jacobs 
Matthew  C.  Lynch 


Maurice  E.  Harrison 

Class  of  1910 

Merton  Aurel  Albee  Samuel  Hamilton  Day 

Clyde   Holman    Brand  Arvin  Benjamin  Shaw 

Class  of  1911 
Allard  Anthony  Calkins  Ray  W.  Hays 

John  Uberto  Calkins,  Jr.  William  H.  Snyder 

*George  Alfred  Haines  George   Armistead   Work 

Class  of  1912 
Newton  Bishop  Drury  Herman   Horatius   Phleger 

Herbert  Charles  Kelly  .  Joe  Goodrich  Sweet 


436 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Mim  Kaph  Mim 

Chemistry  Honor  Society 
Established  in  1901 


MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Benjamin   Ide   Wheeler 
Edmund  O'Neill 
Walter  Charles  Blasdale 
William  Conger  Morgan 
Henry  Chalmers  Biddle 
Edward  Booth 


Meyer  Edward  Jaffa 
George   Davis   Louderback 
Carl  Howard  McCharles 
Paul  McCreary 
William  Cruess 
Charles  E.  Burke 


Graduates 

Oscar  Leo  Brauer  Wallace  Kendall  Gaylord 

Charles   Barrow  Bennett  Walter  Pearson  Kelley 

Leslie  Theodore  Sharp 

Class  of  1912 

Irving  Furlong  Paul  William  Christman 

Elmer  Walker  Gruer  Raymond   Henry   Butzbach 

Charles  Walton  Owen   Benjamin   Nelson 

Edward  Zeitfuchs  Geoffrey  Armstrong  Buddle 

Ralph  Tavenner  Albert   Marine   Weston 

William   Newton   Davis  Colin  Campbell  Rae 

Class  of  1913 
Graham  Blair  Moody  William  James   Barnhill 

Arthur  Eaton  Albino  Martinetti 

Ermon   Dwight  Eastman  Frederick  George  Linde 

Laurence  Winant  Dickey  Herold  Pittman  Hare 

Joseph    Pavliger 


437 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Phi  Beta  Kappa  Society 

Alpha  Chapter  in  California — Organized  December  14,  1898 


Robert    G.    Aitken 
Arthur  C.  Alvarez 
Ernest  B.   Babcock 
Frederic  T.   Blanchard 
Walter    C.    Blasdale 
George    H.    Boke 
Cornelius  B.   Bradley 
Russell   J.    Crawford 
J.   Frank  Daniel 
Charles  Derleth,  Jr. 
Monroe    E.    Ueutsch 
Adolphus  J.   Eddy 
J.    Sidney   Elston 
Bernard    A.    Etcheverry 
Isaac  Flagg 
Martin  C.  Flaherty 
Charles  M.   Gayley 
Farnham  P.  Griffiths 
Walter    M.    Hart 
Mellf.n    W.    Haskell 
Henry   R.  Hatfield 
Eugene  W.  Hilgard 
George  H.  Howison 


Albert  H.  Allen 


Lilian    E.    Amos 
Della    Bayley 
Paul   Boehncke 
Ethel    M.    Burke 
Clinton    C.    Conrad 
Mabel   L.    Frisbie 


Alice    Lorraine    Andrews 
Muriel   E.    Burnham 
Edith   D.  Clapp 
Ernest   G.    Clewe 
Ray  M.   Gidney 
Cornelius   N.   Hackett 


Bertha  A.   Lais 

438 


MEMBERS 
Faculty 

Lincoln   Hutchinson 
Frank  Irwin 
Willis   L.    Jepson 
William   C.   Jones 
Henry   J.    Kesner 
Charles   A.    Kofoid 
Alexis  F.   Lange 
Joseph  N.   Le  Conte 
Derrick  N.  Lehmer 
Armin   O.    Leuschner 
Edward   M.    Lewis 
E.   Percival  Lewis 
Ivan    M.   Linforth 
George    D.    Louderback 
John   H.    McDonald 
Orrin  K.  McMurray 
William    A.    Merrill 
Adolph  C.   Miller 
Ralph  S.  Minor 
Wesley   C.    Mitchell 
William  C.  Morgan 
Bernard  Moses 
Charles  A.   Noble 

Administrative  Officers 

Victor  H.  Henderson 

Graduates 

Rose    Gardner 
Louis   A.   Giamboni 
Arthur   R.    Williams 
Frances    Lytle   Gillespy 
Lillian    I.    Harber 
Louise   L.   Huebner 

Class  of  1912 

Hazel  H.  Hund 
Robert  A.    Monroe 
Graham    B.    Moody 
Grace   Moore 
Norma    Noteware 
Edith    E.    Pence 

Class  of  1913 

Victor  F.   Lenzen 
Barbara   Nachtrieb 


George    R.    Noyes 
Herbert  C.  Nutting 
Jessica    B.    Peixotto 
Torsten    Peterson 
Carl   C.    Plehn 
William   J.    Raymond 
Leon  J.   Richardson 
Charles   H.    Rieber 
William   E.   Ritter 
Charles   E.    Rugh 
Arthur  W.   Ryder 
Richard    F.    Scholz 
William    A.    Setchell 
Robert    Sibley 
Henry    Morse    Stephens 
George    M.    Stratton 
Max  Thelen 
Harry   B.   Torrey 
Chauncey   W.   Wells 
Benjamin    Ide   Wheeler 
Carlos  G.  White 
William  H.  Wright 


James    Sutton 


Marie  K.   Lazarus 
Geneva  W.   Mower 
Franz    Schneider 
Signe   E.   Soderberg 
Henry    D.    B.    Soule 
Walter  P.  Taylor 


Lester    S.    Ready 
Laurence   H.    Smith 
Warren    P.    Tufts 
Lilian   Van   Dyke 
Ralph  C.   Waddell 


Tohn    L.    Simpson 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Sigma  Xi 


Faculty 


Robert  Grant  Aitken 
Arthur  Carl  Alvarez 
Leroy   Anderson 
Ernest  Brown  Babcock 
David   Prescott   Barrows 
Benjamin   Abram   Bernstein 
Henry   Chalmers   Biddle 
Walter   Charles  Blasdale 
San  ford    Blum 
Theodore  Crete  Burnett 
William   Wallace  Campbell 
Albert   Edward   Chandler 
Samuel  Benedict  Christy 
Warren    Thompson    Clarke 
Clarence   Linus  Cory 
Frederick    Gardner   Cottrell 
Arnold    Abraham     D'Ancona 
Russell    Tracy    Crawford 
George    Davidson 
Charles  Derleth 
Arthur   Starr    Eakle 
Adolphus   James    Eddy 
S.    Einarsson 
Thomas    Sidney    Elston 


Harold  Child  Bryant 
Bruce    Clark 
Carl   Howard    McCharles 
Maurice  Barstow  Nichols 
Vyacheslav  Petrovsky 
Baldwin   Munger   Woods 


William    Harry    Archer 
Robert  Percy   Brandt 
Arthur  Franklin  Bridge 
Geoffrey    Armstrong    Buddle 
Carlos  Newton  Carter 
Roy   Elwood  Clausen 
Donald  Isaac  Cone 
Sherwin    Bennett    Davis 


Bernard    Alfred    Etcheverry 
Elmer   Edgar  Hall 
Harvey   Monroe  Hall 
Clarence   Melvin    Haring 
Mellen    Woodman    Haskell 
William    Brodbeck  Herms 
Ernest    Albion    Hersam 
Frederick  Godfrey  Hesse 
Eugene    Woldemar    Hilgard 
Rui.iff  Stephen   Holway 
Myer  Edward  Jaffa 
Willis    Linn    Jepson 
Henry  James   Kesner 
Charles   Atwood    Kofoid 
Herman    Kower 
Alfred  Louis  Kroeber 
Charles   Kuschke 
Joseph   Nisbet   Le   Conte 
Derrick   Norman    Lehmer 
Aarmiro    Otis    Leuschner 
Exum   Percival   Lewis 
Charles  Lipman 
Joseph    Long 

George    Davis    Louderback 
Robert   Hills   Loughridge 

Graduates 

Albert   Lloyd  Barrows 
Frank   Stanley   Baxter 
Walter   Pearson    Kelley 
Carl   Clarence   Kiess 
Paul  Willard   Merrill 
Daniel    Walter    Morehouse 

Class  of  1912 

John  Franklin   Dodge 
Richard   Ferdinand   Felchlin 
George   Cleveland  Haun 
Frank    Samuel    Hudson 
Edwin    Ambler    Ingham 
Robert    Ansley    Monroe 
Graham    Rlair    Moody 
Walter   Hall   Nixon 
Tay    Marion    Read 


Samuel   Steen    Maxwell 
John    Campbell    Merriam 
Frederick    Meyer 
Ralph    Smith    Minor 
Robert    Orton    Moody 
William    Conger    Morgan 
Charles  Albert   Noble 
Edmond    O'Neill 
Thomas   Milton    Putnam 
William  James   Raymond 
Herman    White    Reynolds 
William   Emerton    Ritter 
William   Albert    Setchell 
Frederick   Slate 
Ralph   Elliott  Smith 
Frank   Soule 

George  Malcolm   Stratton 
Frederick    Horace   Tibbetts 
Harry   Beal  Torrey 
Albert   Wurts  Whitney 
Edward   James   Wickson 
Harry  Oscar  Wood 
Charles    Willliam    Woodworth 
Hammond   William    Wright 


Fred   Eugene   Pernot 
John   Hines   Pitman 
Albert  Holmes   Rowe 
Arthur  Herbert  Saxer 
Edward    Haslam    Walters 
Reynold  Young 


Lester   Seward   Ready 
Laurence    Hammond    Smith 
William    Harris   Smyth 
Harry  James  Saook 
Tracy    Irwin    Storer 
Percy    William    Thompson 
Thomas  Brainerd  Waddell 
Marshall  Gould  Williamson 


439 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Tau  Beta  Pi 

Engineering  Honor  Society 
Founded  at  Lehigh   University  in  1885 
Alpha  Chapter  of  California — Established  in  1907 


MEMBERS 
Faculty 

Arthur  Carl  Alvarez 
Samuel  Benedict  Christy 
Charles  Linus  Cory 
Charles  Derleth,  Jr. 
Bernard   Alfred   Etcheverry 
Harmon   S.  Fischer 


Adolphcs  James   Eddy 
Charles   Gilman  Hyde 
Henry  James  Kesner 
Andrew   Cowper  Lawson 
Joseph   Nesbit  Le  Conte 
Robert  Sibley 


Frank  Soule 

Graduate 

Elmer  Fred  Davis 


Class  of 
Edwin  A.  Abeel 
William   Harry  Archer 
Goeffrey    Armstrong    Buddle 
Sinclair  Ernest  Carpenter 
Sherwin   Bennett   Davis 
Richard  Ferdinand  Felchlin 
Alfred  Victor  Guillou 
John   Sanford  Halbert 
Harold  Bernard  Ham  mill 


1912 

Edwin  Ambler  Ingham 
James    Frederick    Pollard 
Lester  Seward  Ready 
Horace  Earl  Sandoval 
William   Harris  Smyth 
John   Robert   Sum  an 
Percy  William  Thompson 
Thomas  Brainard  Waddell 
John  Philip  Zipf 


Class  of  1913 
Tom   Allen   Bither  Calvin  Ira  Kephart 

Donald  Isaac  Cone  Nicholas  Lloyd  Taliaferro 

Arthur  Eaton  Otto  Christian  Tretten 

William   Hugo  Jaenicke  James  Latham  Underhill 


440 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Alpha  Zeta 

Agricultural  Technical   Fraternity 
Founded  at  Ohio  State  University   in   1897 
California   Chapter — Established  in   1908 

MEMBERS 


Faculty 
Eugene  Waldemar  Hilgard 
Robert  Hills  Loughridge 
Edward  Albert  Setchell 
Ernest  Brown  Babcock 
Henry  Josef  Quayle 


William  Brodbeck  Herms 
Clarence  Melvin  Haring 
Charles   Bernard  Lipman 
Meyer  Edward  Jaffa 
William   T.   Harne 


Graduates 

Frank  Cuthbert  Clarke  Leslie  Theodore  Sharp 


Class  of 
*Jay  Dwiggins,  Jr. 
*Charles  Warren  Pauly 

Henry   Norbert  Wolff 

Walter  Hall  Nixon 

Niles  Pond  Searls 
^Charles  Le  Roy  Butler 

Gerald  Driscoll  Kennedy 


1912 

George  Dinsmore  Hansen 
Albert  John  Rath  bone 
George  Pressley  Dozier 
Harry   Stanley   Yates 
Thomas  Clay  Mayhew 
Leo  J.  Anderson 
Nelson  Scott  Mickel 


Roy  Elwood  Clausen 

Class  of  1913 
Edwin  Coblentz  Voorhies  James  Vernon  Short 


'Graduated    Dec,    1911. 


441 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Beta  Kappa  Alpha 

iiological    Honor  Society — Established  in   1910 
MEMBERS 


Faculty 

Samuel  Steen  Maxwell 
Charles   Atwood   Kofoid 
Harry  Real  Torrey 
William    Brodbeck    Herms 
Robert  Orton  Moody 
Frederick  Parker  Gay 
John  Campbell  Merriam 
William   Emerson   Ritter 
Arthur  Russell  Moore 
Henry  Josef  Quayle 
Charles  William  Woodworth 

Graduates 
Ivan  Clifford  Hall 
Albert  Holmes  Rowe 
Ernest  Winton  Cleary 
Clifford  Daniel  Sweet 
Robert  Guy   Sharp 
Harold  Child  Bryant 
Earl  Hamilton  Cornell 
Thomas  Harper  Goodspeed 
Bruce  Laurence  Clark 


John  G.   Bridwell 
Richard  Harvey 
T.  Brailsford  Robertson 
Wilbur  A.  Sawyer 
Willis  Linn  Jepson 
Glanville  Y.   Rusk 
Joseph   Grinnell 
Joseph  A.  Long 
J.  Frank  Daniel 
Theodore  Crete  Burnett 
Harvey  Monroe  Hall 

Walter  Penn  Taylor 
Frank  Cuthbert  Clarke 
Ruby  Lacy  Cunningham 
Myrtle  Elizabeth  Johnson 
Sarah  Rogers  Atsatt 
Lyman  Luther  Daines 
Charles  Laurence  Baker 
William  Bell  Parker 
Edward  Haslam  Walters 


Elizabeth   Heald 
Class  of  1912 


William   Francis  John  Kerr 
Marshall  Gould  Williamson 
Jay  Marion  Read 
Clarence  Edgar  Wells 
Robert  Percy  Brandt 

Class  of  1913 
Frederick  George  Linde  John   Carroll  Ruddock 

Benjamin  Yoe  Morrison  Graham  Blair  Moody 


Tracy  Irwin   Storer 
Fred  Herman  Kruse 
John   P.  Buwalda 
Harry  James  Snook 
Hugh  Kling  Berkley 


442 


HONOR  SOCIETIES 


Theta  Tau 

Founded  at  University  of  Minnesota  in   1904 
Epsilon  Chapter— Established  in  1911 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 
George  Davis  Louderback  Henry  James  Kesner 


Graduate 
Artemus   Dalton  Wilcox 
George   Burger   Dillingham 
Randolph  Rising  Vail 
William  Ladele  Moody 
George  Miles  Collins 


Charron   Monell  Staples 
George  D.  Smith 
Chas.  Morton  Heron 
Ernest  E.  Behr 
Elmer  Fred.  Davis 


George  Clark  Gester 


Class  of 
Ralph   Countryman 
Walter  Hugh  Schroeder 
Guy  Leonard  Goodwin 
Wolcott  Pratt  Stanton 
Stephen  Howell  Gester 
John  Robert  Suman 
Frederick  George  Tickell 
Geoffrey    Armstrong    Buddle 
John  Peter  Buwalda 

Chester  Arth 


1912 

Frank  Samuel  Hudson 
N.  John  Lund 
Ralph  Brooks  High 
Percy  W.  Thompson 
Sherwin  Bennett  Davis 
Burdette  Arnold  Otis 
Graham  Blair  Moody 
Andrew  Werner  Laws< >n 
Frank  Lake  Wilson 

ur  Allen 


Class  of  1913 

Arthur  Eaton 


443 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Enewah 

Organized  1900 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 

Florence  Abbie  Rolfe  Nelda  Gertrude  Eaton 

Hallie  Kathleen  Owen 

Class  of  1912 
Jennie  Olivette  Bunce  Mary  Elizabeth  Fairchild 

Edith  Juanita  Garner  Shirley  Schnoor 

Edith  Lillian  Hoag  Lulu  Edith  Hair 

Pearl  Margaret  Kenyon 

Class  of  1913 
Pearl  Grace  Sifford 

Class  of  1914 
Frances  Mary  Lane  Helen  Tonner  Myer 

Hedwig  Elizabeth  Ballaseyus  Lillian   Mary  Moore 

Class  of  1915 
Aline  Brovvder  Mary  Ruth  Hill 

Lucile  Stephens 


446 


Edith  Garner  Florence    Rolfe  Hallie    Owen  Nelda   Eaton 

Jennie  Bunce  Edith    Hoag  Shirley    Schnoor 

Mary   Fairchild  Pearl  Kenyon  Lulu   Hair  Hedwig   Ballasegus 

Lillian  Moore  Frances  Lane  Helen   Meyer 

Pearl   Sifford  Aline   Browder  Lucile    Stephens  Mary    Hill 

447 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Rediviva 

Organized  1903 
MEMBERS 

Graduate 

Bertha  Eleanor  Lowden  Clara  Anne  McLaurix 

Rowena  Evelyn  Symmonds  Marie  Ethel  Hitchcock 

Class  of  1912 
Hollace  Joy  Shaw  Rltth   Wet  more  Shinn 

Jeanie  Ellison  Brock  Ethel  Beatrice  Lockhart 

Class  of  1913 
Alice  Elizabeth  Webster  Elsiedora  Brixck 

Ada  Louise  Swortzel  Rebekah  Gardner 

Marie  Marcella  Coates 

Class  of  1914 

Gertrude    May   Grey  *Edxa  May  Staxglaxd 

♦Lucy  May  Gidney 

Class  of  1915 
Frieda  Elizabeth  Tarke  Jamie  Marguerite  Butterfield 

Leona  Jones  Verna  Donna  McLean 


*  Absent  on  leave. 


448 


Ethel    Lockhart 
Jeanie    Hrock 
Frieda    Tsrke 


Ethel  Shinn 
Alice   Webster 
Rebekah   Gardner 
Marie   Coates 


Klsiedora     l'rinck 
Gertrude  Grey 

I.eona    Jones 


Ada    Swortzel 
Yerna   McLean 
ramie    Butterfield 


44U 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Copa  de  Oro 

Organized    1905 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 
Ethel  Mary  Burke  Edith  Ash  more  Bliss 

May  Louise  Seitz  Kate  Bigelow 

Hazel  Flood  Pearl  Elizabeth    Heath 

Aln. a  Landis 

Class  of  1912 

Hazel  Claire  Jarvis  Gilda  Belloni 

Sadie  Vesta  Milliken 

Class  of  1913 
Bertha   Agnes   Lais  Hazel  Estelle  Malcoi  M 

Class  of  1914 
Valeria    Elizabeth    Mixer      Mary  Alice  Cowden 
Isaeelle  Virginia  Caples 

Class  of  1915 
Ruth  Rochester  Bliss  Helen  Howard  Sterling 


450 


Pearl   Heath 
Edith    Bliss 
Bertha    Lais 
Valeria  Mixer 


Kate   Bigelow 
Hazel    Jarvis 
Sadie    Milliken 
Mary   Cowden 


Ethel    Burke 
Gilda    Belloni 
Isabelle  Caples 
Mila    Landis 


May  Seitz 
Hazel    Malcolm 
Ruth  Bliss 
Helen  Sterling 


451 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Cranford 

Organized   1908 

Honorary 

Amanda  M.  Hicks 

Graduate 

Myrtle  Elizabeth  Johnson  Vera  Isadore  Bagot 

Elizabeth  Roulette-  Rhoades 

Class  of  1912 

Ruth  Elce  Pitman  Rose  Annette  Nigg 

Jeanette  Stewart  William ita  Bee  Bayley 

Class  of  1913 
Ruth  Martha  de  Witt  Florence  Elizabeth  Ryle 

Lillian  Eva  Waite  Mable  Fern  Jones 

Class  of  1914 
Helen  Ranke  Hall  Doris  Boggs 

Esther  Maria  Bomgardner  Edith  Hazel  Waterhouse 

Class  of  1915 

Lura   Maria  de   Camp 


452 


Myrtle    Johnson 

Elizabeth  Rhoades 

Vera    Bagot 

Rose   Nigg 

Ruth    Pitman 

Williamita    Bayley 

.Mabel   Jones 

Ruth   I)e   Witt 

Lillian   Waite 

Jeanette  Stewart 

Florence    Ryle 

Esther    Bomgardner 

Helen   Hall 

Edith    Waterhouse 

Doris  Boggs 

Lura    De    Camp 

453 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Ida  Louise  Rinn 


Aldebaran 

Organized   1909 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 

Elsa  Ludeke 
Beulah  Hershiser 


Class  of  1912 

Goldie  California  Hulbert  Edna  Quay 

Harriet   Williamson   Tuft 

Class  of  1913 
Clara  Anne  Sherwood  Erma  Blanche  Lucas 

Veleda  Delila  Mattison  Beulah  Whipple 

Maude  Elizabeth   Price  Minnie  Walton 

Hope  Eugenia  Pinkley 

Class  of  1914 
Dorothy  May  Ludeke  Ella  Elizabeth  Scott 

:*Myrtle  Libby 


Hazel  Tindell 


Class  of  1915 

Louena  Little 
Helen  Ross 


*Absent  on  leave. 


454 


Elsa    Ludeke  Edna   Quay  Harriet  Tuft 

Ida   Rinn  Goldie  Hulbert  Hope   Pinkley  Minnie   Walton 

Erma   Lucas  Beulah  Whipple  Maud   Price  Dorothy    Ludeke  Clare   Sherwood 

Ella    Scott  Myrtle  Libby  Veleda    Mattison  Beulah   Hershiser 

Hazel   Tindell  Helen   Ross  Lovena  Little 


455 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Carnarvon 

Organized  1910 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 

Amy  Berlin  Mead  Lily  Cliberon 

Esme  Tierney  Amy  Thomas  Louise  Helen  Hansen 

Irene  Amy  Patchett  Helen    Warren    Chase 

Ida  May  Shrode  Leora  May  Smith 

Class  of  1912 

Mabel  Bessie  Taylor  Hazel  Catherine  Remsen 

Alice  Kate  Tupman 

Class  of  1913 

Hazel  Gillette  Daisy  Lee  Monroe 

Isis  Caroline  Carter  Lois  Glidden 

Kathryn  Delia  McCabe 

Class  of  1914 

Dorothy  Louise  Smith  *Susanna   Martin 

*Evelyn  Adriance  *Winnia  Atkinson 

Class  of  1915 

Jessie  Josephine  Todman  Grace  Holmes 

Helen  Folwell  Cummins 


*Absent  on  leave. 

456 


Irene    Patchett  Helen    Chase  Lily    Cliberon 

Ida   Shrode  Louise   Hansen  Amy   Thomas  Alice    Tupinan 

Hazel    Remsen  Amy    Mead  Leora    Smith  Daisy    Monroe  Mabel    Taylor 

Isis   Carter  Kathryn    McCabe  Lois    Glidden  Helen    Cummins 

Jessie    Todman  Dorethy  Smith  Grace   Holmes 


457 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Kel  Thaida 

Organized  1911 

MEMBERS 

Honorary 

Mrs.  Edna  Little  Adams 

Graduate 

Clara  Nelle  Haryett  Marian  Ward 

Otillia  Regina  Kohlberg 

Class  of  1913 

May  Christal  Lucile  Aline  Lewek 

Mary  Margaret  Dotta  Ruth  Mayer 

Katherine  Lawton   Kelly  Ikma  Felice  Stein 


Ethel  Righetti 


Class  of  1914 

Virginia  Bronsted  Spencer 


Class  of  1915 
Grace  Merrill  Alvarado  Ruth  Elma  Rourke 

Genevieve  Marie  Ball  Ethel  Esther  Frieberg 

Leota  Adelaide   Provines  Hilda   Brandenstein 

Janet  Elizabeth  Smith  Camille  Lasky 

Clara  Emily  Biaggi  Rose  Eleanor  Wolf 


458 


Mary   Dotta  Lucile  Lewek  Otillia    Kohlberg 

Ruth   Mayer  Clara  Haryett  Virginia  Spencer  Leota   Provines 

Irma   Stein  Ethel    Righetti  May   Christal 

Genevieve  Ball  Grace  Alvarado  Janet    Smith 


459 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Bachelordon 

Organized  1894 

MEMBERS 

Class  of  1912 
Edward  Douglas  Nickerson  Rey  Maynard 

Edward  Mead  Bordwell  John  Robertson  Quinn 

Class  of  1913 

Daniel     Montgomery     Drum-  Clarence  Edward  Waldner 

heller,  Jr.  Harold  Lewis  Hazen 

William   Douglas  McMillan,  Jr. 

Class  of  1914 

James  Rodney  Allen  Edward  Francis  Mullaly 

George  Frost  Burgess  *Earl  Marion   Hart 

Charles  Jackson  Abrams  *Fredrich  Carl  Cordes 

Class  of  1915 
Hammond  McDougal  Monroe  Carl  Frederick  Biedenbach 

Sardis  Wilcox  Templeton  John  Bruce  Junor 

William  H.  Abrams 

*■  Absent  on  leave. 


460 


Edward  Bordwell  Clarence    Waldiier  Edward  Nickerson  Rey   Maynard 

John    Ouinn  William   McMillan  Edward    Mullaly  Charles   Abrams 

Harold    Ilazi-n  Daniel    Drumheller  Carl    Biedenbach  James    Allen 

Sardis  Templeton  (ieorge  Burgess  Hammond  Monroe 


461 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Abracadabra 

Organized  1895 
MEMBERS 

Graduate 
Merton  Aurel  Albee  Raymond  Wilson  Hayes 

Leslie  Sharp 

Class  of  1912 
Chester  Arthur  Allen  Geoffrey  Armstrong  Huddle 

Leroy  Walton  Allen  Harold  George  Baugh 

John  Ralph  Fairbanks  Edwin  Ambler  Ingham 

Louis  Walker  Layne 

Class  of  1913 

Fred  Harold  Allen  Edgar  Francis  Sullivan 

Eric  Houghton  Rhodes  Robert  Gordon   Sproul 

James  Latham  Underhill 

Class  of  1914 
Otoe  Francis  Montandon  Frederick  Paul  Keen 

Clair  Vernon  Goodwin  Russell  Gordon  Wagenet 

William  Hood  Hall  Carroll  Sharp 

Class  of  1915 
Lyman  Waite  John  Vimont  Baldwin 

Ronald  Wesley  Montandon  Allan  Frank  Williams 


462 


Louis    Layne  Edwin    Ingham 

James   Underhill  Leslie   Sharp 

Otoe    Montandon  trie 

Edgar    Sullivan  Baul    Keen 

Clair   Goodwin  Allan    Williams 


Harold   Baugh 
Geoffrey    Buddie 
Rhodes  ^     ired 

Carroll    Sharp 
John    Baldwin 


Merton    Albee  Ray   Hays 

Roy    Allen  Chester  Allen 

Allen  Gordon    Sproul 

Will   Hall  Gordon    Wagenet 

Ronald    Montandon       Lyman   Waite 


463 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Dwight 

Organized  1900 

Graduate 

Harold   Child   Bryant 

MEMBERS 

Class  of  1912 
Stanley   Spellmeyer  Leland   Byron   Raab 

Earl  Alfred   Slater  William   Howard  Spear 

Calvin   Rankin   Barnes 

Class  of  1913 

Myron  Ellsworth  Page  Erle  Gladstone  Hill 

Wilbur   Frederick  Luxton  Ray  Russell   Ingels 

Arthur  Allyn 

Class  of  1914 

Joseph  Arthur  Wilson  Sydney  Robert  Smith 

Class  of  1915 
Ivan   Almer   Slater  Irving   Franklin   Davis 

Edwin  Gower,  Jr.  Frederick  George  Knoop 

James   Kenneth   Lochead 


464 


Harold   Bryant  Leland   Raab  Earl   Slater  William  Spear 

Calvin    Barnes  Stanley  Spellmeyer       Myron    Page 

Ray   Ingels  Wilbur  Luxton     "  Erie   Hill  Joseph   Wilson 

Sydney    Smith  Irving   Davis  Frederick  Knoop 

Arthur  Allyn  Ivan    Slater  James  Lochead  Edwin    Gower,    Jr. 


465 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


La  Junta 

Organized    1901 

MEMBERS 

Medical 
Clifford  Daniel  Sweet 

Class  of  1912 
Joe  Goodrich   Sweet  William  Goodricke  Donald 

Burton  Alexander  Swartz  George  Arneke  Kretsinger 

Earl  Warren  Arthur  Winfield  Taylor 

Class  of  1913 
Kenneth  Lloyd  Carpenter  Jessie  Jay  Jacobus 

Joseph  Allen  Owen  Harold  Day  Farmer 

Thomas  Brantley  Copeland 

Class  of  1914 

Herbert  H.  Burbank  *Claude  Van  Dyke 

Richard  Caleb  Shaw  *Roy  C.  Miller 

Karl    Snyder    Hazeltine 

Class  of  1915 
Thomas  Ralph  Sweet  George  Harold  Slyter 

Fred  Wilson  Beck  Carroll  F.  Glenny 


*  Absent  on  leave. 


466 


Hurt    Swartz  Arthur    Taylor  William    Donald 

Kenneth  Carpenter        George  Kretsinger  loe    Sweet  Thomas    Copeland 

Earl    Warren  Jay    Jacobus  Allen   Owen  Herbert    Burbank  George    Slyter 

Richard    Shaw  Karl    Hazeltine  Clifford    Sweet  Harold    Farmer 

Tom    Sweet  Fred    Beck  Carroll  Glenny 


467 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


ATHERTON. 


Atherton 

Organized  1904 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 
Alfred  Solomon 

Graduate 
♦Roy  Henry  Blosser  James  Herbert  Mitchell 

Class  of  1912 
♦Lawrence  Henry  Saxon  Harrison  Leroy  Wyrick 

Thomas  Joseph  Ledwich  Tracy  Barrett  Kittredge 

Harry  Peter  Bonnickson  Ralph  Edward  Feusier 

Class  of  1913 

Peter  Theodore  Petersen  James  Warren  Knowles 

Charles  Leon  Hampton 

Class  of  1914 
Thomas  Alexander  Grieg  Ernest  Wykeham  Dickman 

George  Versell  Williams 

Class  of  1915 
Cyril  Wesley  McLean  Philip  Van  Devender  Xeff 

Clive  Everett  Baugh  Albert  Gustav  Rinn 

Edward  Sampson  Falk 


•Absent  on  leave. 


468 


Tracy   Kittredge 

Thomas    Ledwicb 

Harry  Bonnicksos 

James    Mitchell 

Harrison  Wyrick 

Ernest   Dickman 

James  Knowles 

Charles   Hampton 

Peter  Petersen 

Ralph    Feusier 

Edward    FaJk 

Philip    Neff 

Thomas   (irieg 

Albert    Rinn 

(ieorge    Williams 

Cyril     McLean 

469 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


1W03 


Unity 

Organized  1903 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 

Walter  Atheling  English 

Class  of  1912 
Roy  Willbanks  White  William  Homer  Hooker 

Leland  Leroy  Hyde  George  Edward  Noyes 

Class  of  1913 

Ferda  Joe  Ogle  Joseph  Patrick  McNamara 

John  Samuel  Watson  *  Howard  Combs  Stover 

*Garret  Van  Riper  *Manley  William  Sahlberg 

Frederick  Harrold  Gnarini  Gordon  Gladstone  Gale 

Class  of  1914 
Owen  Benton  Smith  Hugh  Dix  McMillan 

Archie  Hood 

Class  of  1915 
Chester  Clifford  White  Irving  Hunt  Royston 

Samuel  Fred  Hollins  Temple  Crank 


'Absent  on  leave. 


470 


Leland  Hyde  Roy  White  Walter    English 

William   Hooker  George    Noyes  Joseph    McNamara  John  Watson 

Frederick    Gnarini  Howard    Stover  Manley  Sahlberg 

Irving   Royston  Archie   Hood  Ferda    Ogle  Owen    Smith 

Hugh   McMillan  Samuel   Hollins  Chester    White 


471 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


l6jb 


Pirates 

Organized  1903 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 
Ralph  Edward  Bkrry 

Class  of  1912 
William   Harky  Archer  Floyd  Philip  Bailey 

William  Paul  Cltster  Leo  Walter  Doyle 

Paul  Sidney  Jones  Ixgvart    Holm    Teii.man 

Royal  Arnold  Vitousek  James  Edwin  Wallace 

Class  of  1913 
John    Cecil    Altman  Enos   Pall  Cook 


EDGAR    Wallace    Dutton 
James  Albert  Ross 


Melville  McDonough 
Thomas  Black  Reed 


Class  of  1914 
James  Davis  Basye,  Jr.  Bertram  Kellogg  Dunshee 

Frank  Herbert  Lathro;\  Jr. 

Class  of  1915 
Alfred  Henry  Oak  George  Dennison   Mallory 

Eugene  Shirrell  Kellogg 


472 


Paul  Jones  Ingvart   Tcilman  Floyd   Bailey 

Leo   Doyle  William    Archer  John    Altman  Thomas    Keed 

Paul    Cook  William  Custer  Edgar   Dtttton  James    Ross  Melville    MeDonough 

James  Basye  Frank    Lathrop  Andrew    Weiant  Alfred   Oak 

Bertram   Dunshee         George    Mallory  Eugene    Kellogg 


473 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Del  Rey 


Graduate 

Archibald  Ray  Tylor 

Class  of  1912 

Horace  Marden  Albright  Edwin  Alfred  Fisher 

Gerald  Miner  Allen  Clifford  Melvin  Goss 

Jonathan    Burdette    Brown  Charles  Franklin  Masten 

Harry  Leeds  Coles  John  Wesley  Masten 

Albert   Marine  Weston 

Class  of  1913 
James  Boyd,  Jr.  William   Hugo  Jaenicke 

*Harry  Joseph  Cullinane  Otto  Bismarck  Liersch 

Royal  Frederick   Havens  Donald  Marcus  Maclean 

Charles  William  Humphreys  Jay  Hamilton   Price 

*Laurence  Arthur  Byers 

Class  of  1914 
George  Leslie  Albright,  Jr.  John  Deter  McNary 

Parker  Allen  Reische 

Class  of  1915 
William   Bigelow  Lee  Clinton  Morehead 

Frederick  Edmond  Danner  William   Robertson  Ralston 

Joseph  Eugene  Stanton 

"■Absent  on  leave. 


474 


Jonathan  Brown 
Charles  Humphreys 

Jay   Price 
Donald    Maclean 
Parker    Keische 


Charles    Masten  Horace    Albright 

James   Boyd  Clifford    Goss 

Lawrence  Byers  Frederick 

George    Albright  William    Ralston 

Lee  Morehead  William  Bigelow 


Edwin    Fisher  Harry  Coles 

Gerald  Allen  John    Masten 

Havens        Otto   Liersch 
William  Jaenicke  John   McNary 

Joseph   Stanton  Frederick  Darner 


475 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Calimedico 

Organized   1905 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Arthur  Russell  Moore 

Medical 

Harold  Lund  Jensen  Jay  Marion  Read 

Clarence    Edgar   Wells 

Dental 

Robert    Bliss    Howell 

Graduate 

Dunleigh  Corey  William   Harrison  Snyder 

Walter  Penn   Taylor 

Class  of  1912 
David  Locke  Clement  Harry  Ellis  Stocker 

Roy    Everet    Warren 

Class  of  1913 
Stanley  Lincoln  Arnot  Frederick  George  Linde 

John  G.  Clark  Graham  Blair  Moody 

Brython  Perry  Davis  John  Carroll  Ruddock 

Randolph  Churchill  Eisenhauer  Thomas  Dale  Stewart 

Warren  Douglas  Horner  Robert  Patterson  Shields 

Edward   11  untsm  an-Trout 

Class  of  1914 
Fletcher   Brandon   Taylor  Marsden  Scott  Blois 

Class  of  1915 

Eugene  Nathaniel  Arnot  Earl  Barton  Birmingham 

Clifford   Grant   Canfield  Howard  Alexander  Houston 


476 


Harry    Stocker 
Dunkigh    Corey 
Clarence  Wells 
Graham    Moody 
Robert    Shields 


William  Corey 


Robert   Howell 
Fred    Linde 
Stanley    Arnot 
Marsden    Blois 


Harold  Jensen 


Koy    Warren 
Brython   Davis 
Warren   Horner 
Clifford    Canfield 


Marion   Read 


Eugene    Arnot 


David  Clement 
John    Clark 
Thomas    Stewart 
Earl    Birmingham 


William    Snyder 


Fletcher   Taylor         Howard   Houston 


Walter   Taylor 

Edward    Trout 
Carroll   Ruddock 
Randolph    Eisenhauer 


477 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Los  Amigos 

Organized  1907 

MEMBERS 

Faculty 

Raymond  B.  Abbott  Benjamin  D.  Moses 

Graduate 

Sherman  Luzern  Brown  Oscar  Leo  Brauer 

Ernest  Samuel  Alderman  George  Charles  Jensen- 

Wallace  Bradford  Boggs 

Class  of  1912 
Raymond  Henry  Butzbach  David  M.  Durst 

Franklin  William  Oatman         Charles   Leroy  Walton 

Class  of  1913 
Frank  Martin  Booth  Harry  Stanley  Clark 

Ralph  Gordon  McCurdy  George  Howden 

Ralph    DeLamatyr   Taylor 

Class  of  1914 
Albert  Augustus  Jungermann    Edwin  Frederick  Smyth 
Frank  Bernhard  Lenz  Strother  Perry  Walton 

Class  of  1915 
Robert  Ingersoll  Daley  Roy  Maxwell  Hagen 

Howard  Ellsworth   Gilkey  Otto  Richard  Jungermann 

Ward  Saunders 


178 


George    Jensen  Wallace  Boggs  Raymond    Butzbach     David   Durst 

Oscar   Brauer  Frank    Booth  Ralph    Taylor  Charles    Walton 

George  Howden  Franklin    Oatman         Edwin    Smyth  Strother   Walton  Ralph   McCurdy 

Harry    Clark  Frank   Lenz  Roy   Hagen  Albert  Jungermann 

Howard   Gilkey  Otto  Jungermann  Robert   Daley 


479 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Dahlonega 

Organized  1909 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 

George  Robert  Livingston 

Class  of  1912 
Ray  Millard  Gidney  Benjamin  Harrison  Viau 

Clarence  Nevil  Smith  Edward  Conant  Livingston 

Walter  Charles  Nolan  Cyrus  Eugene  VanDeventer 

*Roy  Van  Eton  Bailey 

Class  of  1913 

Ralph  Waldo  Coane  Otis  Allen  Ozro  Sharp 

Frank  Raymond  Tolf  Ralph   Whitney   Reynolds 

Burt  Winslow  Will  James  Whelan 

Oliver  William  Young  Fred  Shelford  Wyatt 

James  Wallace  Spofford 

Class  of  1914 
Henry  Stevenson  Bailey  Harry  Baldwin  Mills 

George  Kane  O'Hara  Russell  Frey  O'Hara 

Arthur  Fayette  VanDeventer  Raymond  Alonzo  Waite 

Class  of  1915 
Grover  VanDeventer  David  Edward  Culver 


*  Absent  on  leave. 


480 


Benjamin  Yiau  Ray  Gidney  Clarence   Smith  Conant   Livingston 

Walter   Nolan  Frank    Toll  Fred    Wyatt  Ralph    Reynolds 

Eugene   Van   Devtnter       Will    Whelan  Arthur   Van    Deventer         Oliver    Young  Otis    Sharp 

15urt    Winslow  George    O'Hara  Raymond   Waite  Harry    Mills 

Russell    OTIara  David    Culver  George   Van  Deventer 


481 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Casimir 

Organized   1910 

MEMBERS 

Class  of  1912 

William  Anthony  Binsacca        Thomas   Clay  Mayhew 

Leo  James  Anderson 

Class  of  1913 
Bertram  Ford  Kline  Frank  Veach  Mayo 

William   Culp  Thomas  Frederick  Tavernetti 

Freeman  Charles  Witt  Mark  Logan  Witt 

Herbert  Lloyd  French  John  Flodin 

*Hilliard  Lawrence  Estes 

Class  of  1914 
James  Hecht  Shields,  Jr.  William  Campbell  Binkley 

Ernest  Von  Allmen 

Class  of  1915 

Erle  Arlington  Brock 


482 


John  Flodin  Leo  Anderson  Thomas   Mayhew 

Mark  Witt  William   Binsacca  Bertram  Kline  Freeman    Witt 

Frank   Mayo  Thomas  Tavernelti  William   Gulp 

Herbert    French  Erie  Brock  James    Shields 


483 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Skulls 

Organized    1910 

MEMBERS 

Graduate 
Frank  Cuthbert  Clarke  Charles  Fender 

Robert  Guy  Sharp 

Class  of  1912 
Robert    Stanton    Sherman  Harry  Stanley  Yates 

Class  of  1913 
Xeal  Cleveland  Frank    Albert    Kessleb 

Edward  Salomon 

Class  of  1914 
Rudolph  Joseph    Brown  Pini  Joseph  Calvi 

Eben  James  Carey  Merrill  Windsor   Hollingsworth 

Melville   Clarence   Nathan  King  Reid 

Elmo  Russell  Zumwalt  Eugene   Howard   Barbera 

Class  of  1915 
William   Victor  Clarke  Claude  Henry  Clay 


484 


Charles     Pender  Harry  Yates  Robert    Sharp  Robert    Sherman 

Prank  Clark  Edward  Salomon  Prank   Kessler 

Rudolph   Brown  Merrill  Ilollingsworth         Neal    Cleveland  Pini  C'alvi 

Melville    Nathan  Elmo    Zumwalt  Eben   Carey 

Eugene  Rarbera  Claude   Clay  William    Clark  King    Reid 


485 


HOUSE  CLUBS 


Hilgard 

Organized  1911 

MEMBERS 

Class  of  1912 
Raymond  Marchant  Scott 

Class  of  1913 
Ross  Lawrence  Guy  Hal  J.  Sams 

John  Harry  Hassheider  Raymond  Ellis  Clifford 

Ralph  Styles  Raven  Roy  William  Merrick 

Class  of  1914 

Herman  Silas  Dumke  Milton   Cutler  Gordon 

Lewis  Kalischer  Newfield  Herbert  Carlisle  Witherow 

Cecil  Bedford  Merrick  Curtis  Clausen 

Class  of  1915 

Kenneth  Clifford  John  Gilbert  Boardman 

Frederick  Schiller  Faust  John  Albert  Cooper 


486 


Roy  Merrick 
Ralph  Raven 
Cecil  Merrick 
John  Boardman 


Hal   Sams 
John  Hassheider 
Milton    Gordon 
Herman  Dumke 


Raymond  Scott 
Ross  Guy 
Curtis   Clausen 
Lewis   Newfield 


Raymond  Clifford 
Herbert  Witherow 
Kenneth   Clifford 
Frederick  Faust 


487 


CALIFORNIA  SCHOOL  OF  DESIGN 


Margaret   Bruton 
Madge    Spencer 


Helen    Clark 
Hazel    Roemir 


Vera    Metzger  Edna    Clarke 

Constance  Purrington      Edna    Strauss. 


Delta  Nu 

Alpha   Chapter — Founded  at   Hopkins 
Institute  of  Art,   March  7,  1903. 
Re-established   February    18.    1911. 


Helen   Britton   Clark 
Edna  Maye  Strauss 
Edna  Clarke 
Margaret  Bruton 
Madge  Estee  Spencer 
Hazel  Roemer 
Marian   Levy 


Active  Members 

I  la  Putnam 

Gertrude  Morin  Withers 
Edith  Brovvnlee 
Madeline    Marie    Walsh 
Lois   May  Edwards 
Helen  Kendrick 
Vera  Metzger 
Constance  Purrington 


488 


w 


%  /AVJ  \i 


©>L 
of  DESIGN 


ART 

Let  us  step  down  out  of  the  clouds  and  talk  about  art. 
Art  is  to  be  had  for  the  buying"  at  the  Art  School.  There  is  a 
commercial  odor  to  this  statement  that  may  offend  long-haired 
men  and  induce  them  to  turn  up  their  noses.  As  a  matter  of 
fact,  you  cannot  get  anything  in  this  world  without  buying  it. 
Paying  a  price  does  not  necessarily  mean  money,  of  course, — 
your  own  or  the  easy  funds  from  home.  There  is  a  sort  of 
gold  that  is  sweated  out  with  pick  and  shovel  in  the  dim 
recesses  of  one's  own  life,  refined  with  much  labor  of  heart 
and  brain,  and  minted  with  brush  or  pen,  or  your  own  two  lips, 
or  your  own  two  eyes,  for  that  matter.  This,  philosophers 
say,  is  the  money  that  buys  the  best  things  of  life,  among 
which  is  art. 

Some  people  guess  art  to  be  a  luxury,  but  in  sober  truth  it  is  a  necessity.  It 
continually  cries  out  to  you  like  a  huckster  in  old  London  streets,  "Come  buy  !  Come 
buy !  "  but  people  go  by,  as  the  "end  man"  used  to  say,  with- 
out heeding.  Perhaps  they  do  not  want  to  pay  the  price. 
There  are  always  people  who  never  do  want  to  pay  the  price 
for  anything;  it  is  so  much  easier  to  grumble  at  its  exorbi- 
tance. Thoughtless  people  imagine  art  to  be  a  painting  in  a 
gold  frame,  or  a  marble  statue  on  a  pedestal,  and  only  for  the 
rich  ;  therefore  they  decry  it,  than  which  nothing  is  more 
wrong.  For  art  is  a  part  of  our  daily  life,  rich  or  poor,  and 
might  reverently  be  asked  for  in  the  Great  Prayer  along 
with  our  daily  bread.     For  "man  lives  not  by  bread  alone." 


489 


CALIFORNIA  SCHOOL  OF  DESIGN 


Modeling 

A  Play  upon  Words,  in  One  Act  and  a  Tableau. 

Scene:  The  Modeling  Room. 

Characters  :  The  Young  Ladies  of  Professor  Cumming's 
Class  and  John,  the  Janitor. 

(As  the  curtain  rises,  the  young  ladies  are  seen  at  work  at 
the  modeling  stands,  modeling  in  damp  clay.) 

First  Young  Lady — I'd  like  to  know  who  has  taken 


all  my  clay ! 

Second 
study. 

'first  J' 
part  of  it. 


My  can  is  almost  empty. 
V.  L. — Maybe  you  did  not 


'can"  your  last 


L. — No,  I  know  I  didn't;    that's  the  funny 
I  wet  the  figure  down  before  I  went  home 
and  put  cloths  on  it  and 
now  I  can't  find  it. 

Third  Y.  L.— Well, 
it  can't  be  in  your  can  if 
you  didn't  can  it,  can  it? 
goodness'  sake,  don't 
me  dizzy. 
it's  very  queer  how  my 


reading  Shakespeare  the 

and  turned  to  clay, 
the  wind  away ! 


Fourth  Y.  L. — For 
talk  like  that !     It  makes 

First  Y.  L.— Well, 
clay  walks  off ! 

Fifth  Y.  L.—l  was 

other  day,  where  he  says : 

Imperious  Caesar,  dead 
May  stop  a  hole  to  keep 

Maybe  her  clay  was  Caesar,  and  he  has  walked  off. 

Sixth  Y .  L. — Oooh !   At  midnight,  when  graveyards  yawn,  and  all  that  sort 
of  thing ! 

Seventh  Y .  L. — What  would  you  take  to  stay  in  the 
Modeling  Room  alone  at  night  with  all  these  figures  draped  in 
wet  slimy  cloths  ? 

Eighth  Y .  L. — I  know  what  I'd  take. 
Everybody — What  ? 
Eighth  Y.  L.— Cold. 
Everybody — Oh ! 
(Enter  John,  the  Janitor.) 
John — I  found  a  whole  lot  of  clay  by  the 
door  going  into  the  yard  this  morning. 


490 


CALIFORNIA  SCHOOL  OF  DESIGN 

Ninth  Y.  L. — The  clay  was  going  into  the  yard? 

Tenth  Y .  L. — No,  stupid,  the  door  was  going  into  the  yard. 

First  Y.  L. — Oh,  it  is  my  clay! 

John — Well,  you  musn't  take  the  clay  out  of  the  Modeling  Room ;  it  is  against 
the  rules. 

First  Y .  L. — But  I  didn't  take  it  out. 

John — Well,  by  jiminy!   I  don't  know  how  it  got  there.    It  wasn't  there  last 
night  when  I  closed  up,  and  I  found  it  there  this  morning. 

Chorus — Great  Caesar's  ghost ! 

(tableau,    curtain.) 


491 


CALIFORNIA  SCHOOL  OF  DESIGN 


Ars  Longa,  Vita  Brevis! 

Student,  let  this  be  thy  song, 
As  thou  laboreth  with  thy  brush, 

"Life  is  short  and  art  is  long!" 
Xot  for  thee  a  maiden's  blush  ! 

Thine  the  charm  of  line  and  mass, 
To  thee   tint  and  tone  belong; 

Xot  for  thee  the  brimming  glass  — 
"Life  is  short  and  art  is  long!  " 

Feast  thy  eyes  on  plaster  cast, 

"Antique"  shapes  thy  fancy  throng; 

Thou,  a  hermit,  e'en  must  fast  — 
"Life  is  short  and  art  is  long!" 

l'envoi 
"Away  with  casts!    Thou'dst  study  'life'? 

And  with  Dan  Cupid  go  a'roving  ?  " 
Beware  !    beware  !     Red  lips  protest 

That  "Art  is  much  too  long  for  loving!" 

Honors 

Julian  Academy  (Paris)  Medal  and  Scholarship:  Emu. 
Crapuchettes. 

New  York  Art  Students  League.  Scholarship  for 
Modeling:   Elizabeth  Dahl. 

New  York  Art  Students  League,  Scholarship  for  Life 
Drawing:   Marvin  Cohn. 

San  Francisco  Art  Association  Scholarships,  School  of 
Design:  Klir  Alfred  Beck,  Hazel  Gowan,  Gladys 
Marie  Hop.art,  Charles  Augustus  Knix,  Samuel 
Nabika,  Leta  Olive  Kf/iviiam,  William  Gaw, 


492 


"Tod"    Wheeler 
'Ed"  Einstein     Harry  Gabbert 
Key    Maynard 
"Zeke"    McNear 


Coane  at  bat 
"Kret"   Kretsinger 


'Stu"   Wilder 


'Cece"    Altman 


"Bill"   Beatty 

"Spike"    Davis 
Lloyd    Myers     "Jimmie"    Hill 
"By"  Ford     Lyman  Grimes 


494 


John    R.   Quinn 
"Louie"    Watts 
"Short"    Shurtleff 
"Cove"    Sloane 


'Newt"    Drury 


'Heinie"  Stern      "Bill" 


'Doug"    Douglas  Einstein  and  Dinkelspiel 

"Herb"  Kelly     "Mike"  Sullivan 
"Jerry"   Kennedy 
King  "Stan"  Arnot     "Fritz"  Linde 


495 


"Stu"    Wilder  "Fat"    Silent         Myers,     Simpson     and     Sproul 

"Ed"  Trout     "Dick"   Rust 
'Manse"    Griffiths     "Clint"    Evans 

"Curly"    and    "Erv"    Clausen  The  Baseball  Bunch 


>ill"    Greig    "Johnnie"   Stroud 
"Cupe"     Cartwright 
"P.londy"    and    "Dave" 
"diet"  Allen 


496 


RAGGING 


HERE'S  HOW!  BROWS 


497 


RAGGING 


'WOMAN'S    DAY" 


That  Sorority  Rag 


See   the  shoulders  swaying, 
Watch  the  band  a-playing, 
Hear  the  girls  a-saying, 

Do  it  some  more. 
Delta  Gammas  ragging, 
Round  the  hall  zigzagging. 
Not  a  couple  lagging, 

Wear  out  the  floor. 
Alpha  Phis  and  Thetas, 
Dancing  'round  with  Betas, 
O  you  educators ! 

Just  hear  that  strain. 
Chi  Omegas  crawling, 
Alpha  O's  enthralling. 
Hear  the  Kappas  calling, 

Play  it  again. 
Everybody's  learning  that  sorority   rag. 
Syncopated    harmony — and   raggy    wiggle-wag, 
The  time,  the  place,  the  woman,  you'll  not  find  in  the  Cal. — 
But  everybody  does  it — at  the  Girls'   Spring  Festival. 

498 


MARYLY    WE    ROLL    ALONG 


RAGGING 


ROLLO'S  TOUR  OF  THE  FRATS 

SIGMA   NU 

Rollo  suddenly  grasped  Mr.  George's  hand  and,  looking  up,  said :  "What  is  that  shingled 
house  with  the  plumbing  outside?" 

"That,"  said  Mr.  George,  "is  a  fraternity." 

"What  is  that?"  asked  little  Rollo. 

"A  fraternity  is  like  a  small  dormitory  but  you  can  put  a  jeweled  Greek  letter  pin  in 
your  beer  and  make  enemies  with  the  other  fraternities." 

"What  is  that  one  called?"  queried  little  Rollo. 

"That  is  the  Sigma  Nu,"  answered  Mr.  George. 

"Oh  !    look  at  the  funny  man  with  the  red  hair ;    is  he  the  Yellow  Kid  ?  " 

"You  must  not  ask  such  questions.  Xo,  that  is  Blondy  Ingram,  the  last  of  the  Sigma 
Xuhicans." 

"Listen  to  that  funny  language;    is  it  English?"  asked  Rollo. 

"No,"  answered  Mr.  George.    "It  is  Sigma  Xuamerican." 

Just  then  they  drew  nearer  and  heard  Rex  Rice  saying  to  a  prep. :  "Tonight's  me  night. 
None  of  you  gents  heard  from  Monk  Dignan  lately  ?  Monk  was  some  guy :  shot  put,  broad 
jump,  cigarette  roll ;  there's  the  chair  the  Monk  used  to  sit  in.  Blonde  sits  in  its  now.  Study? 
I  guess  not.  The  Sigs  don't  come  to  college  to  study ;  they  come  for  something  broader — 
I  don't  know  what.     Well,  gents,  drop  over  to  the  shrine  again  soon." 

Little  Rollo  and  Uncle  George  hastened  on. 


CHI    PHI 

"Who  is  that  bald-headed  man  standing  there?"  asked  Little  Rollo. 

"Why  that  is  Louis  Watts ;    he  is  a  Chi  Phi,"  answered  Mr.  George. 

"But  I  though  that  they  were  extinct,"  replied  clever  Rollo. 

"Not  quite,"  answered  Mr.  George ;  "but  it  is  a  peculiar  species  of  vertebrate  that  lives 
on  beer  and  crackers  but  never  ate  units." 

"What  are  those  leaves  on  the  Chi  Phi  shield  for?"  asked  Rollo. 

"Those  are  leaves  of  absence,"  Mr.  George  replied. 

"Do  the  Chi  Phis  graduate?"  asked  Rollo. 

"No,"  said  Mr.  George ;  "they  manage  the  college  publications.  One  of  them  did  gradu- 
ate, though,  about  two  years  ago." 

"What  is  that  round  wooden  basket  in  back  of  the  house?"  was  Rollo's  question. 

"That,"  Mr.  George  replied,  "is  a  keg  of  nails." 

Little  Rollo  looked  farther  back  in  the  yard  and  concluded  that  a  great  deal  of  car- 
pentering was  done  about  the  place. 

499 


RAGGING 

PHI  GAMMA  DELTA 

"Is  that  the  White  House  laundry  building?"  asked  Rollo. 

"No,"  said  Mr.  George;  "that  is  the  Figi  House." 

"Oh,  yes,"  observed  Rollo,  "I  saw  their  ad.  in  the  Pelican;  that  is  the  house  that  Jack 
built.    My  father  saw  the  plans  when  he  was  a  Freshman." 

"Is  it  as  expensive  as  the  Zete  house  ?  " 

"No,"  answered  Mr.  George,  "but  they  rent  as  many  rooms  and  have  the  original  pages 
of  the  Pit  there." 

"What  is  that  noise  I  hear?"  queried  Rollo. 

"It  is  the  Figis  at  luncheon,"  was  Mr.  George's  reply. 

"Oh !  it  is  the  Pig  Dinner,  then,"  said  little  Rollo. 

"Are  the  Figis  and  the  Tri  Delts  the  same?"  was  Rollo's  next  question. 

"No,  but  they  are  very  close,"  said  Mr.  George. 

Just  then  wild  shouts  rent  the  air,  and  Mr.  George  and  Rollo  knew  that  Prent  Gray, 
Spike  Woodward  or  Kales  had  come  back  to  the  Campus. 


PHI  DELTA  THETA 

"Is  that  the  Phlegers'  residence?"  asked  Rollo. 

"Yes."  said  Mr.  George ;    "and  the  Phi  Diddles  live  there,  too." 

"Who  is  that  handsome  man  so  like  Adonis  ?  "  Rollo  asked. 

"That  is  Schroeder,  the  perfect  man.     He  sleeps,  walks  and talks  to  the  members  of 

the  fraternity." 

"That  fellow  hurrying  into  the  house  was  a  prominent  man  in  college.  Now  he  carries 
notes  for  Jim  Fisk  and  Bob  Flannery.     It  is  Harold  Ashley." 

"The  Phleger  boys  are  very  well  liked,"  observed  Rollo. 

"Yes,"  said  Mr.  George,  "by  everybody  but  some  of  the  upper  class  Dekes." 

"Who  are  the  Dekes  ? "  was  Rollo's  question. 

"You  must  whisper  when  you  speak  of  them ;    they  are  very  exclusive." 

"Have  the  Phi  Diddles  many  underclass  'C'  men  ?  "  asked  Rollo. 

"No,"  said  Mr.  George ;    "they  are  all  singers  now." 

At  that  moment  there  was  much  commotion,  and  Rollo  knew  some  caucus  was  break- 
ing up. 

SIGMA    ALPHA    EPSILON 

"What  is  that  broken-down  house  there?"  inquired  Rollo. 

"That  is  the  S.  A.  E.  house,"  said  Mr.  George. 

"That  is  Jack  Barnett;    I  met  him  here  six  years  ago,"  said  little  Rollo. 

"Where  does  that  blinding  light  come  from?"  Mr.  George  inquired. 

"It  is  from  Sophomore  Buckley's  $500  sapphire  ring,"  was  Rollo's  reply. 

500 


RAGGING 

"Do  the  fellows  there  study  higher  art  ? "  queried  Rollo. 

"Yes,  they  are  connoisseurs  on  busts,"  was  Mr.  George's  answer. 

Suddenly  there  was  a  great  silence,  not  even  broken  by  the  noise  of  the  snare  drum,  the 
Psi  U  bear  or  Hill  next  door  inhaling  certified  milk.  Mr.  George  and  Rollo  looked  up  and 
saw  some  S.  A.  E.'s  pointing  Johnny  Stroud  out  to  a  couple  of  open-mouthed  preps. 

DELTA  TAU  DELTA 

"What  is  that  man?"  asked  Rollo. 

"That  is  J.  J.  Miller,  a  figure  of  speech,"  replied  Mr.  George. 

"He  is  a  Delta  Tau  Delta.     That's  a  fraternity,  too,"  Rollo  volunteered. 

"Yes ;  it's  right  over  there  in  the  shadows  of  the  trees — and  Northcroft.  It  is  a  very 
fine  house,"  Mr.  George  continued. 

"Fine  feathers  don't  make  fine  birds,"  observed  Rollo. 

"No,  but  they  do  make  fine  hats."  Mr.  George  answered. 

"I  see  the  fellows  are  still  smoking  Obaks.  Northcroft  smoked  them.  He  became  the 
totem  after  Booth.    J.  J.  Miller  is  the  totem  pro  tern.     Is  he  politic?" 

"No,"  said  Mr.  George;    "he  is  a  politician." 

"Are  the  Delta  Tau's  very  particular?"  queried  Rollo. 

"Look !  "  said  Mr.  George,  and  little  Rollo  saw  some  brow  being  ejected  because  his 
collar  conformed  not  with  the  last  Arrow  ad. 


Round  the  Harmon  go  the  aged  pelicans, 

Gorgeously  arrayed,  see  them  on  the  fade, 

And  the  classy  ones  assemble  near. 

As  the  big  bass  drum  we  hear, 

All  the  pellies,  queens  and  class  start  in  the  fling; 

All  commence  to  sing; 

See  them  texasing 

As  their  feet  they  raise, 

And  they  acclaim  the  praise  of  raggin'  here. 


SKULL  AND  KEY  RUNNING 

It    was    a    dark    and    stormy    day 

When    S.    &  K.   pulled  off 

Their    yearly    running    on    the    track, 

And  made   the   co-eds   scoff. 

They'll  have  to  make   some  great   amends 

To   draw    a   crowd   next   year, 

For  co-eds  have  their  dignity 

Which  brooks  no  idle  jeer. 

O   S.   &   K.,   they're   with  us   yet, 

Lest   we    forget,    lest   we    forget. 

501 


RAGGING 


INTERCOLLEGIATE    CHESS:     (K)XIGHT    AND     PAWN 


Junior — I've  gotten  a  great  deal  of 
pleasure  from  anticipating  a  call  on  a 
co-ed. 

Soph. — You  know  the  saying,  "Antici- 
pation is  greater  than  realization"? 

Junior — That's  right ;  I  guess  I'll  stay 
at  home  and  enjoy  myself." 


She — They're  always  talking  about 
"the  man  of  the  hour" ;  I  wonder  if  a 
co-ed  couldn't  be  "the  woman  of  the 
hour" ? 

He — Xo  ;  it  would  take  a  co-ed  an 
hour  and  a  half. 


He — Did  you  hear  about  "Soggie"  Miller  and  the  Pi  Phi  ? 
She — No,  what's  the  excitement? 

He — Why  "Soggie"  was  eating  some  chocolate  ice-cream  with  one  of  the  little  Pi  Phi's 
during  their  dance  and  he  said,  "Oh,  I  see  you  spilled  some  chocolate  ice-cream." 
"No,  Thoggie,"  she  said,  "that'th  juth  a  birth-mark." 

Owed  to  Scheeline 

You  may  talk  of  "nobby  suitings" 

And  the  English  "skimp  cut,"  too; 
You  may  mention  Raglan  ulsters, 

Or  coats  "electric  blue" ; 
Of  none  of  these  I'm  lacking 

(As  I  have  said  before), 
And  I  owe  it  all  to  Scheeline — 

Yes* and  a  damn  sight  more. 


What  goes  round  a  buttin'? 

A  goat. 

No,  Beatty  and  Miller. 


. 

'-r^Jk 

7    ^  [  ^tmW  * 

m~ 

■$& 

^^m        am 

E-JgP 

m 

■ 

502 


RAGGING 


FRATERNAL 
SHIELDS 


'>   v  w\ 


NEW  F*V»r>  FOO  STANFOF   >   ftTHLETeS. 

"life"  is  just 


503 


RAGGING 


"'"'"'mini 


504 


WmStM  lkfooat " 


RAGGING 


HIRE   EDUCATION 


.F?  Bum  Is 

HAVE  YOU  A  DATE  FOR  THE  "GLEE"         PUTTING  HIS  WEIGH   THROUGH 
YET?  COLLEGE 

She — They  tell  me  the  Psi  U's  have  quite  a  menagerie. 
He — Yes,  Hill,  a  cow  and  a  bear. 


The  Heyer  v.  Grimes  election  proved  the  old  adage  "the  Heyer  the  fewer." 


505 


RAGGING 


Rugby 

A   LAY   MADE   ABOUT  21    TO  3,    NOV.    13,    1911 


Prex  Wheeler  of  Berkeley 

By  his  Greek  gods  he  swore, 

His  California  students 

Should  now  play  football  more, 

By  the  Greek  gods  he  swore  it 

Congratulation  Day, 

And  mighty  was  the  ans'ring  shout, 

E'en  the  moss-grown  Cal.  came  out 

To  summon  his  array. 


Through  the  streets  and  o'er  the  hills 
The  great  report  then  spread ; 
To  frat,  to  club,  to  classroom, 
What  our  Big  Ben  had  said. 
Shame  on  the  weak-kneed  person 
Whose  spirit  is  too  tame 
To  join  the  sport  of  all  sports, 
After  the  last  big  game. 


The  Fratres  et  Sorores 

Are  ready  for  the  fray, 

Each  man  and  woman  student 

Awaits  the  time  to  play. 

Alpha  Phi  and  D  K  E 

Are  training  right  along, 

For  Theta  Xi  and  Deltas  three 

Won't  prove  one  grand  sweet  song. 


Interclub.  intercollege, 

Interclass.  interprof. 

The  good  Lord  only  knows  how 

This  Rugby  will  come  off. 

Shall  we,  our  dear  instructors, 

Cry  "Rreak!"  or  "Smear  'em"  hear? 

Who  knows?      One  thing  will  happen, 

We'll  skin  the  Reds  next  year. 

L.  L.  L.,  '14. 


506 


RAGGING 


'ARE  COLLEGES  OLD 


Professor    Discovers    Another 
"Evil  of  the  Age" 


Jim  Fisk's  Widow 
Dying  in  Poverty 

Helpmeet    of    Famous    Man    of, 

Sky   Rocket   Career   Near 

End  of  Tragic  Life. 

wonder  on  ZS$  per  hr. 


J$Q 


jSuspect  Yegg  May 

Be  Local  Raffles 


An    Assortment    of    Burglar    Tools 
Is  Found   on   John  Miller, 

^v^      Whose  Pal  Has  Fled.    „ r- 

WOOER  WITH  REVOLVER 

IS  SOUGHT  BY  POLICE 

"Rattlesnake      Jack"      Charged 
With  Attacking  Escort 

AUBURN,  Feb.  2. — J.  J.  Miller,  other- 
wise known  as  "Rattlesnake  Jack,"  is 
being  sought  by  the  police^  for  terror- 
izing women  with  a  revolver  and  of 
writing  threatening  letters.  According 
to  the  police,  he  is  enamored  of  a  num- 
ber of  women  and  uses  his  revolver 
while  wooing. 

A  young  man  here  was  escorting  two 
women  to  their  home  the  other  night 
and  says  that  Rattlesnake  Jack  crept 
up  behind  them  and.  fired  his  pistol, 
afterward  threatening  the  escort. 

He  was  chased  through  town  by  a 
crowd  of  men,  but  escaped. 


U  C  CO-EDS  SHOW  "GOOD 

FORM  IN  ROWING-  RACES. 


-/Miss  Hopkins  was  riding  in  the  rear 
seat  wKh  young  McCormack  and  es- 
caped with  slight  injuries.  Miss  Men- 
lhan  was  seated  beside  Howard. 


>We  guess  no- 


IS  SUED  FOR  BILLS 

Chinese  Cook  Decamps*  With 

Coin,   Causing   Chi   Psi 

Men  Much  Trouble. 

Among    the    fraternity  -members    are 

I,.    S.     Gregory,    W.    W.    Norton,    C.    P. 

Humphrey.    A.    L.    Beal,    M.     A      Cart-. 

vvright,  W.  W  Ferner,  H.  G.  Gab- 
j  bert,    M.    K.    Campbell,    C      B      Gordon. 

Fred  Lurabard,  J.  J.  Alexander,  RogeV 
I  Keith,  Fred  Kreuger,  W.  Wi  Salsig, 
!S.  G.  Wilder,.  R.  E.  Wilder,  J  F  Sul- 
ilivan  and  G.   H     Sweet. 

Shy  not  join  Einstein 
Dinkelspiel  and  Drury 
in  the   suit? 

507 


RAGGING 

'WOMAN'S  DAY" 


Freshie  Glee  Proves 
One  of  Most  Pleasing 
Affairs  of  Season 


"'*'  CO£JS  M/rc/tOA* ' 


Miss  Colis  Mitchum  and  Miss 
Beth  Johnson,  active  in  plans  of 
Freshie  Clee. 


U.  C.  Cb-Ed  Cleared 
Of  Speeding  Charge 

Miss   Maryly  Krusi    Is  Freed  in 

Time  to  Attend  Her 

Classes. 


Miss  Maryly  Krusi,  a  co-ed  in  the  Uni- 
versity   of    California,    charged   with   vio- 

»  lating  the  speed  limit,  was  before  Judge 
Mortimer  Smith  this  morning.  She  asked 
that  her  case  be  disposed  of  speedily  as 
she  had  to  attend  her  class  in  the  univer- 
sity. Giving  her  age  at  18,  she  avoided 
being  certified  to  the  juvenile  court,  and 
after  p'eading  guilty  and  making  an  ex- 
planation of  the  occasion  of  her  violation 

j  of  the  ordinance,  judgment  was  suspend- 
ed  by  Judge  Smith. 


Freshmen  Are  Hosts  of   Other 

Classes  al  Event  Held  in 

Harmon  Gymnasium 


Dudley  Gunn  might  have  represe 
S"he  .Pride  of  the  Harem,"  judging  by 
Vo  ."quantities    of   pearls    wound    about 
,'.s  neck  and  shoulders.     It  was  a  Turk- 
ish  costume   of   baggy   trousers   of  sky 
line    satint    a    zouave    jacket    of    black 
elvet  embroidered  in  gold,  with  a  sash 
4f  old  rose  satin.     Pearl   bracelets  and 
bracelets    of   other   jewels    gave   a   coy, 
fnaidenly  air  of  supreme  elegance,  and 
as    young    Gunn    wore    the    regulation 
:uiban  covering  his   head,   it  was  diffi- 
cult to  tell  whether  he  was  represent- 
ng  a  lady  or  a  gentleman,, 

Dudley  Gunn,   ex-15. 


SIGMA   CHIS   WILL    MEET 

The  Sigma  Chi  class  of  the  Al- 
varado  Christian  church  will  hold 
its  regular  meeting  tonight  at  the 
home  of  Miss  Minnie  Sprung,  820 
North  Coro'nado  street.  •'  All  mem- 
bers   are    asked    to    be    present. 

CURLEY  REPORTS 
BACK  ON  THE  JOB 


JOLLY    SOPHOMORE 


THE  NAKED  TRUTH 

Platz,  Platz, 
Religion   chats, 
Liquor   drals. 

He'll  save  us  yet, 
Our  goat  he'll  get 
(Don't  take  the  bet). 

To  Platz,  Platz, 
Doff  your  hats; 
Rats!  Rats!! 


508 


RAGGING 


INDOOR  ATHLETICS 


5.F"J3ryanV3 


L 


POSTAL  TELEGRAPH  -  COMMERCIAL  CABLES 

TELEGRAM 


JMSSSSMSW 


Tl   I       I     Jl 


TT1  rv  I    T 


al 


S.  F.,  Feb.  20th,  1912. 
To  C.  W.  Heyer,  German  Savings  Bank : 

Don't  send  allowance  yet.  Am  taking  up  banking  and  am  doing  very  well.  Unless  some- 
thing happens,  I  always  have  a  good  hand.  Things  are  looking"-up."  Have  flushes  so  often, 
the  fellows  suggest  the  Infirmary.    Having  a  Royal  time  on  the  straight.  Charlie. 


WHAT  CHANCE  HAS  MONA  LISA? 


509 


RAGGING 


0  Girls,  Girls!  What  Cannibal  Hearts  You'll  Shatter! 

«♦*     «>♦<»     *♦<»     *♦*      «♦*     <»♦*     «♦*     <*♦*     *♦* 

Sixteen  Sorority  Sylphs  Sail  Smiling  Summer  Seas 


SCENE  AT  SAILING  OF  STEAMSHIP  SIERRA 


The  sea  was  particularly  gay  and, 
frothy  and  the  sun  was  particularly 
warm  and  mellow  when  the  steamer 
Sierra  cut  the  blue  waters  of  the 
Golden  Gate  yesterday,  bound  for 
Honolulu. 

On  the  deck  of  the  highly  favored 
ship  were  srxteen  of  the  sweetest  mem- 
bers of.t-JUr'Kappa  Kappa  Gamma.  This, 
unenlightened  one  Is  THE  sorority. 
Tlie  girls  are  members  of  the  Stan- 
ford and  University  of  California  chap- 
ters and  they  are  going  to  cheer  up 
the  lonely  cannibals  on  the  Sandwich 
islands'.. 


i  that  floated 
from  ,th. 

Something  Is  likely  to  happen  on 
Waikiki  beach  when  these  girls  ar- 
rive. They  have  all  purchased  new 
and  very  fetching  bathing  suits,  etched 
in  the  sorority  colors.  They  are  plan- 
ning to  spend  a  good  deal  of  time  at 
this  famous  beaob.  A  month  will  be 
spent  at  the  Moatia  Hotel. 

Mrs.  E.  C.  Witter  will  chaperone  the 
party,  which  includes  the  Misses  Anita 
Crellin,  Helen  Bannon,  Anita  Ebner, 
Margaret  Gardiner,  Edith  Harmon,  Ro- 
berta Haslett,  Leila  McKlbben.  Mar- 
Mitchell,  Margaret  Witter,  Mar- 
garet Hazeltine   and  Elizabeth  Witter.. 


The  leave-taking  at  the  Filbert- 
wharf  was  a  social  affair  of 
magnitude.  Present  were  many  young 
men-  from,  the  fraternity  houses, 
friends  of  more  humble  walks  In  life 
and    ordinary    rent-paying   fathers. 

Gay  ribbons  of  the  sorority .  colors 
were  thrown  from  the  decks  by  fairy 
Angers  to  other  Angers  on  the  docks. 
It  would  bo  hard  to  tell  what  n.^„- 
sages  passed  along  these  flaunttag  ribj- 
bon..  Girl  friends. were  there  by  the 
score  and  the  dingy  old  whaW  never 
had  been  so  bright.  The,  ship  wa> 
turned  over  to  the  girls,  and  they  prob- 
ably will  do  everything  but  shovel 
~"e  voyage. 


How  about  the  Thetas 
and    the  Alpha  Phis? 
"/hat  happened  on  the 
Wailkikl  teach  that 
has  happened   to   cer 
tain  other  sorori- 
ties right  here  on 
the  Campus?     Here's 
to  the  Kappa  Press 
Agent .      Here ' s  to 
the  Sweet  Sixteen 
and  the   rent-paying 
fathers  with  the 
rent-malting  sons. 


It^«l¥^^ 

4 

m 

*r,  . 

^^■^■^^^ 

NOT   BUM  BENXHES   BUT   BENCH   BUMS 


510 


RAGGING 


A  FINE  BUST 


Junior — I  saw  you  last  Saturday  night. 
Senior — Going  or  coming? 
Junior — Neither,  midway. 


SIGN  OF  THE  BARE 


511 


RAGGING 


SAM 


Sam 

Who  shina  da  shoe, 
Who  blacka  da  boot? 

Who  maka  da  mon, 
Who  go  on  a  toot? 
Sam! 

Who  doa  no  work, 
Who  sit  at  his  ease? 

Who  answer  da  bell 
Whenever  he  please? 
Sam ! 

Who  doa  da  ting 
Dat  for  me  is  a  sin? 

In  da  Woman's  Room 

Who  can  goa  in? 

Sam ! 


EDITORIALLY    SPEAKING 


l'envoi 
Ah !  Sam,  you  have  a  privilege, 

I  only  wish  were  mine ; 
Could  I  pass  those  sacred  portals, 

I'd  give  them  a  free  shine. 


HAIL!  STANFORD,  HAIL!     wplev 


FIGHTING     CALIFORNIAN 

Eng.  Prof. — What  authors  are  you  familiar  with? 

Stude. — Tommy  Carlyle,  Bill  Shakespeare,  Bill  Macaulay  and  Doc  Smithson. 

Prof. — You  shouldn't  speak  so  lightly  of  these  great  men. 

Stude. — Well,  didn't  you  ask  me  which  authors  I  was  familiar  with. 

512 


RAGGING 


TWO   WELL- POSTED   COLLEGE   MEN   WITH 
A  LEANING  TOWARD  THE  LAW 

There  was  a  young  fellow  named  Quinn, 
The  leader  of  racket  and  din; 

With  Krig  and  Todd  Wheeler, 
To  'bus  drivers  did  spiel  'er, 
Then  appeared  on  the  Campus  all   in. 


A   SOFT  JOINT 


513 


RAGGING 


Oakland  Traction  Company 


OAKLANR  CALIFORNIA 


September  27th,   1511. 


Mr.    C.   L.    Butler,   Chairman, 
Pajamarlno   Rally, 

Berkeley,   Calif 

Dear  Sir: 

Wo  viBii  to   call  your  attention  to   the 
difficulty  we  experience  and  the  number  of  paaoengars  dlscommod- 
ed  last  year  on   the  evening  the  UnlverBity  of  California  boye 
had  their  pajarino  rally. 

We  fully    realize  It  is  almost   impossible 
to   restrain  young  men  from  doing  all   kinde  of  things  when  out  on 
a  lark, however  we  will  appreciate  all   the  attention  you  can  grant 
us  on  the  evening  of  the  29th  instant. 

Our  motives   in  calling  your  attantion  to 
the  evening   in  question   is  on  account  of   the  rumors  some  of  our 
employee  heard,  to    ihe  effect  that  the  Pajaua  boye  would  strip 
the  Oakland  Traction  Company's  care  of  all  the  fare  boxes.     Thie 
may  be  all  idle  rumor  and  we  hope  it   is,   as   these  boxes  are  expen- 
sive and  difficult   to  replace. 

Trusting  you  ?-ill  reoelve  this  letter  in 
the  same  kindly  epirit  it  is  intended  and  that  you  will  land  your 
good  office  in  our  assistance  on  the  evening  in  Question, should  it 
be  neceesary,  we  beg  to  remain 


INCREMENT 


Hattie  Tallzes, 
Fine  on  waltzes, 
Steps   fantastic. 
Quite   elastic 
Is  Hattie. 


OAKLAND   TRACTION    COMPANY. 


Superintendent . 


A»D   ALL   THE   HAUGHTY   BOYS  ROT  WAS  AN    ALUMINUM   BALL 


Mary   Bagg, 
Great  on   rag, 
Shuffles  long, 
One   sweet   song 
Is   Mary. 

Mary's  danced. 
Brows  entranced; 
Hattie's   "society. 
Lacks  variety, — 
(live   me   Mary. 


A    SHORT    HAUL 


514 


t— t 

o 


O 
m 
< 


o 
o 
x 

w 

W 
US 


- 

<: 


l-H 

> 
w 

w 


< 


RAGGING 


$©?$& 


518 


RAGGING 


Mrs.  John  Quinn, 

Of  Chicago,  charged  with  responsibility 
for  the  death  of  her  husband,  and 
to  whom  engineers  have  refused  to 
pay  money  on  a  policy  on  his  life. 


ff/fiJv 

WMHt 


MR.  JOHN  R.  QUINN 


HOW  HAVE  THE  MIGHTY  FALLEN? 

519 


THE  UNIVE 
(Not  According 


few  .^.,(1( 


a&> 


CALIFORNIA 
:be  Hearst  Plan) 


RAGGING 
About  Berkeley 

A  musical  Comedy  in  Two  Acts. 

Cast 
Busy  Bee  Drury       ) 
Editor  Einsfiiel        >  Triplets 
Editor  Dinkelstein  ) 


Htm  \  ™'S" 


Erny  Clewe 
Chorus  of  Coeds.,  Loafers,  and  Profs. 

Act  I 
Scene :    Campus. 

OPENING  CHORUS 

Coeds,  and  Loafers — We  are  merry  students  of  our  college, 

We  are  folks  whom  no  one  can  surpass ; 
You  may  say  the  meanest  things  about  us, 

But  we're  proud  to  say  we  ne'er  attend  at  class. 
Profs,  (basso  profundo) — Yes,  we  admit  they  ne'er  attend  a  class. 

(Enter  Erny  Clewe.) 
(This  person  is  attired  in  a  Norfolk  coat  and  curly  hair.     He  possesses  that  peculiar  air 
of  Zetishness  which  always  denotes  the  gentleman.) 


EDITOR  DINKELSTEIN    AND  THE   "PELICAN' 


522 


RAGGING 

E.  C.  (sings)—  I  am  the  great  Dutch  Clewe, 

The  pride  of  all  the  Zetes ; 
To  fill  the  shoes  of  Mansfield. 

I'm  chosen  by  the  fates. 
I've  been  Paola  to  Francesca, 

And  Leicester  to  Queen  Bess ; 
You'd  think  that  I'd  be  happy, 

But  I'm  kicking  ne'ertheless. 

I  fain  would  make  complaint. 
I  fain  would  make  complaint. 

Although  I  do 

Spell  my  name  CIoo, 
It  really  truly  ain't. 

(As  E.  C.  makes  this  complaint,  the  gang  groans  at  the  horror  of  it  all.  Suddenly  there 
is  a  great  commotion  noticeable  in  the  dim  distance.  Revolver  shots  are  heard.  There  breaks 
through  the  crowd  Cap  Phleger,  leading  little  Herm  by  the  hand.  In  Cap's  other  hand,  there 
is  a  smoking  Colt's  44.    Cap  wears  a  cowboy  hat.     Herm  wears  an  expression  of  piety.) 

Cap — Woopee  !   yip  !   yip ! !   yip  ! ! !     Bing,  bang — zowie  ! 

Herm — Control  yourself,  Carl.  Remember  1  am  going  to  be  made  chairman  of  six  com- 
mittees this  afternoon ;  I  must  hold  a  meeting,  debate  against  Stanford,  and  play  football  all 
at  the  same  time,  so  you  really  must  control  yourself. 

Cap — That  boy  Herm's  a  fine  boy ! 

Herm — Carl,  you  know  you  make  me  blush.    Such  compliments  ill  beseem  a  brother. 

E.  C — Hah,  churls!    whence  come  you? 

Cap  (sings)  — 

I  am  Cap  Phleger. 

And  football  is  my  line. 
The  way  I  chew  up  Red  Shirts 

Proves  that  I'm  no  shine. 
I'm  wild  and  woolly. 

The  brows  are  sure  of  that ; 
They  know  I  am  a  cowboy 

'Cause  I  wear  a  cowboy  hat. 

A  younger  brother's  lot  is  not 

So  bad  as  it  is  painted; 
Of  the  appointments  that  I  got. 

There's  not  a  one  that's  tainted. 
There's  Labor  Day  and  Senior  Week. 

Debate  and  football,  too; 
There's  nothing  like  a  Phleger. 

Unless  it  may  be  two ! 

Cap — That  boy  Herm's  a  fine  boy. 

(Far  in  the  distance  can  be  seen  a  large  cloud  of  dust.  It  approaches  and  gradually 
settles,  until  a  light  can  be  seen  shining  through  the  particles.  At  last  three  men  are  seen; 
it  is  they  who  have  raised  the  dust.  On  a  dead  run  they  come  down  the  road.  They  are  the 
Triplets.  Busy  Bee  Drury  is  a  small  slender  man  who  looks  gentle  but  isn't.  Editor  Dinkel- 
stein  is  a  small  stout  man  who  doesn't  look  gentle  and  isn't.  They  both  toddle  along  beside  a 
somewhat  taller  man,  Editor  Einspiel.    It  is  his  hair  which  caused  the  distant  light.) 

Ed.  E. — Don't  stop  us ;   we're  in  a  hurry. 

Ed.  D. — Gotter  git  some  Pelican  dope ! 

B.  B.  D. — Let  us  advance,  gentlemen.  We  have  decided  to  permit  President  Wheeler  to 
take  a  trip  to  Los  Angeles ;  we  are  about  to  sign  contracts  for  the  new  track,  and  cannot  stop. 

E.  C. — What  ho !  Caitiffs,  know  ye  not  that  I  am  Ernest,  own  son  of  Thespis.  Ye  have 
not  asked  my  permission. 

523 


Herm   (sings)- 


RAGGING 

Cap — Bang!   bang!!     Yahoo!    Yer  haven't  asked  Herm. 
Herm — I  must  speak  to  Carl  about  this. 
B.  B.  D — Gentlemen,  I  beg 

Whole  Crowd — Kill  'em !    They're  trying  to  run  the  University  without  us. 
resolutions.     Down  with  amendments.    Down  with  bossism ! 

(Curtain.) 


Down  with 


Act  II 
Scene :    Grizzly  Peak. 


*•*«■■ 


(Enter  the  Triplets,  out  of  breath.  They  have  been  pursued  by  a  mob  of  outraged 
collegians.) 

TRIO 

Don't  envy  us  the  cares  of  state — 

Take  our  advice,  don't  do  it ; 
If  you  should  run  a  place  like  this, 

Believe  us,  you  would  rue  it. 
Whate'er  goes  wrong  they  blame  on  us, 

Complaints  they're  always  yelling; 
What  Platz  or  Beatty  will  do  next 
There  really  is  no  telling. 
Alas,  alas,  alas ! 
(Enter  rest  of  cast.) 
Gang — There  they  are! 

E.  C. — Yea,  'tis  true !     By  me  halidom,  wilt  thou  give  muh  satisfaction  ? 
Cap — Will  you  give  Herm  a  big  job? 
Herm — Will  you  take  care  of  Carl  ? 

B.  B.  D. — Gentlemen,  we  accede  to  your  wishes.  We  now  give  over  to  Herm  the  chair- 
manship of  eight  more  committees.  We  permit  Cap  to  play  front  rank  in  the  scrum  as  long 
as  he  is  as  gentle  as  he  has  been  in  the  past.  We  present  Erny  Clewe  with  the  Greek  Theatre. 
Is  that  satisfactory? 

Gang — Hurrah,  hurrah,  hurrah  ! 

(Curtain.) 


d 

W            -7L  ■ 

W 

'  / 

Iw  j  13^  ~^B 

¥                '  flfl 

Br     lli 

ALj 

IlL 

mm 

§^alf5i§^i 

If 

1           c 

X 

(JOHN   SCORING  A   "TRY") 


MARTIAL    STEAL 


524 


RAGGING 


Has  5w»Ma  I^ut--  t^Toovr, 


No  i^r  1&njMm  Jr..  %>r  CS.J^, 


Oh!    do  you  know  Editor  "Morse"? 

His  voice  is  sweet  and  mellow,  not  hoarse; 

His  political   league 

Is  beyond  intrigue; 
But  they  get  there,  you  bet,  why,  of  course! 


There  was  a  professor  called  "Hutch," 
Who'd  speak  at  fine   banquets   and   such, 

Though  his  speeches  were  long, 

No  wine,   women  or  song 
E'er   entered  with   artistic  touch. 


There  was  a  young  fellow   named  Lyman, 
Who  never  took  chances  with  Hymen, 

But   with   coed,   and   queen, 

He   often   is  seen; 
But,   say!     you'd  not  call   him  a   Simon. 


I  say,  have  you  seen  William  Greig? 

At  Pabst's  he's  caressing  a  keg, 
With  a  cute  Scottish  cap 
And  a  stein  in   his  lap, 

A  lap  ahead  is  young   Bill  Greig. 


525 


RAGGING 


L»pistSTo&g"  CkOvVQ. 


Don't  be  aristocratic, 

But  have  some  "mud"  with  Bill. 
Altho'  he  is  dogmatic, 

lie  serves  his  "racetrack"  still — 
Does  Bill. 


There   was   a   bold   fellow   named   Stern, 
Who  was  of  a  musical  turn; 

With   a   girl   by  his  side, 

To  St.   Peter  he'll   ride, 
And  from  him  some  tricks  she  will  learn. 


I   say,   do  you  know  young   Dick   Rust? 
O'er  trade  ads.   his  whole  frame   will  bust; 

With    new    suit  and   hat, 

He's  a  man  for  a'  that; 
His  motto,   "In   Nobody  Trust." 


There   was  a  young  fellow  named   "Pink" 
A  shark  at  the  studies  we  think: 

But  twelve  times  a  year 

He  indulges  in  beer, 
At   four  in   the   house  does  he  slink. 


526 


RAGGING 


WHAT  WON'T  THE  TRAFFIC  BEAR? 


SUMMER  SURVEYING  AND  SOME  ARE  NOT 


527 


DENTAL  COLLEGE 


CHOKT   OP*  <Ti 

J).  25^: 


August  21 — Sutton's  brain  factory  opens.     Ed  Harrison  conspicuous  by  his  absence. 


DENTAL  COLLEGE 


The  dissecting  rooms  are  spacious,  well  ventilate  and  contain 
all  the  modern  conveniences.  They  will  be  open  to  the  student 
during  the^hours  allotted  to  this  subject  and  at  such  other  times 
with  permission  of  the  instructor  in  charge,  as  it  may  appear 
necessary  or  desirable.  An  abundance  of  material  is  always  on 
hand.  The  material  is  kept  in  first-class  condition  and  at  no  time 
is  the  air  in  the  room  filled  with  unpleasant  odors.      /  '  / 

The  histological  laboratory  is  located  in  the  college  building 
proper.  It  is  very  well  lighted  and  has  all  of  the  necessary  ap- 
paratus for  the  giving  of  a  thorough  course  in  Histology. 


(2)     Zinc- 
Blend,  the  sulphide,  ZnS,  is  second  in  importance  only 
to  the  carbonate ;  it  is  extensively  mined,  and  much  of 
the  zinc  of  commerce  is  procured  from  this  ore.     Its, 
color  is  green,  yellow  or  red  but  mostly  brown.       There 


GENERAL  EMBRYOLOGY  AND  DISEASES  OF  THE  MOUTH, 
FACE,  AND  JAWS. 


7l.i  ttttky  tkM  - 


August  22 — All  fees  in  but  Alpha  Phis. 


DENTAL  COLLEGE 

The  wise  man  says,  "I'll  take  a  chance." 

The  fool  says,  "I'll  pass  it  by." 

Wise  men  rush  where  fools  fear  to  tread. 

For  centuries  each  day  some  man  has  cried  out  to  us,  "Think  before 
you  do."  and  yet  we  who  call  ourselves  "wise"  go  on  taking  chances,  rushing 
in  where  we  should  walk,  never  thinking  and  losing  when  we  might  have 
gained  had  we  not  "taken  a  chance,"  had  we  not  rushed,  and  had  we  thought. 
We  only  heed  the  saying  of  the  sage  after  we  have  unheeded  it  and  earned 
for  ourselves  the  reputation  of  first-class  fools.  Don't  take  a  chance  before 
you  judge  it. 

This  is  all  oft-repeated  philosophy,  tiresome  and  ancient,  but  it  has  its 
worth. 

No  one  knows  better  than  Rice  and  Rowe,  who  heeded  a  feminine  voice 
over  the  telephone  one  night  not  long  ago,  and  her  word  that  she  would 
enlighten  them  if  they  would  meet  her  at  a  specified  corner  of  the  street. 
They  had  nothing  to  prove  that  it  was  better  to  go  than  to  stay  at  home. 
So  they  went,  took  a  chance,  waited  for  someone  who  never  came  and  wasted 
an  hour's  time  that  would  have  proved  valuable — but  wise  men  rush  where 
fools  fear  to  tread. 

Moral :    Don't  trust  the  girls  when  they  make  dates  by  'phone. 

Rice — Why  do  they  put  resin  in  beer? 

Dr.  Millberry — I  don't  know;  I've  been  in  breweries  a  good  deal  but 
am  not  familiar  with  the  beer  industry. 

Dr.  Millberry — What  will  happen  to  zinc  if  dropped  when  hot? 
Bruhns — The  text  doesn't  specify  whether  the  metal  will  bend  or  break, 
but  "will  be  ruined."      Draw  your  own  conclusions. 

Wright — (The  junior  queener,  extracting  tooth  at  5  P.  M.) — Do  you  want 
gas,  Madam? 

Old  Lady — Well,  I  should  say  so.  I  don't  propose  to  stay  in  the  dark 
with  you  or  any  other  man. 

Patient — (In  pain  with  rubber  dam  on). 

Sympathetic  Tuckey — Yes,  Madam,  from  a  woman's  standpoint  suffering 
in  silence  takes  all  the  pleasure  out  of  it. 


August  23 — Glee  Club  returns  from  Europe  with  French  pictures. 

Quality  Trunk 
Company 


Complete  Line  of  Trunks,  Cases 
and  Bags  of  all  sorts     :     :     :     : 


Central  Bank  Building 

OAKLAND 


August  24 — Shorty  Wheeler  opens  art  exhibit. 


August  27— Plant  takes  a  dose  of  Ayers'  Cherry  Pectoral. 


A.  MATTHIESON 


MERCHANT 

TAILOR 


LARGE    STOCK    OF 
IMPORTED  WOOLENS 


College  Men's  Clothes  a  Specialty 

1119  Franklin  Street  OAKLAND,  CAL. 


August  28 — Pi  Phi  moves  into  new  house;    also  "Cap."  Phleger. 


FIRE 


AUTOMOBILE 


MARINE 


FIREMAN'S 

FUND  INSURANCE 

COMPANY 


SAN     FRANCISCO 

CALIFORNIA 

Capital      .... 

$1,500,000 

r\SSCtS         .... 

8,650,000 

OFFICERS 

WILLIAM  J.  DUTTON 

President 

BERNARD  FAYMONVILLE 

Vice-President 

J.   B.   LEVISON 

Second  Vice-President 

LOUIS  WEINMANN      .... 

Secretary 

HERBERT  P.   BLANCHARD      . 

Assistant  Secretary 

JOHN  S.   FRENCH       .... 

Assistant  Secretary 

THOMAS  M.   GARDINER 

A.  W.   FOLLANSBEE,  Jr.     . 

Marine  Secretary 

HOME    OFFICE 

CALIFORNIA    AND    SANSOME    STREETS 

SAN    FRANCISCO,    CALIFORNIA 


August  29 — So  does  Alpha  Phi;    also  Saxe. 


CHAS.  C.  MOORE  &  CO. 

ENGINEERS 

COMPLETE  POWER  PLANT  EQUIPMENT 

power,  lighting,  mining 
pumping,  industrial 
high  grade  machinery 

Home  Office,  99  First  Street,  San  Francisco 

INFORMATION  AND  CATALOGUES  AT  OUR  NEAREST  OFFICE 

SAN   FRANCISCO     ....      FIRST  STREET  PORTLAND     .      .     WELLS  FARGO  BUILDING 

LOS  ANGELES    .      .    AMERICAN   BANK  BLDG.  SALT  LAKE  CITY      .      .     KEARNS  BUILDING 

SEATTLE      ....     MUTUAL  LIFE  BLDG.  NEW  YORK  CITY  .    FULTON  BUILDING 

TUCSON      .      .      SANTA  RITA   HOTEL  BUILDING 


A  Rumor  About  the  Lodgers 

A  Protest 
(Prayerfully  Dedicated  to  the  Chi  Phis  by  a  Neighbor) 
Sweet  Gentleman : 

If  you  should  find 
Aught  in  this  screed  which  seems  unkind, 
Just  cut  it  out.      He  who  indites 
These  feeble  lines,  no  malice  bears. 
From  out  a  loving  heart  he  writes 


August  30 — Tom  Dunn  learns  to  speak  English. 


GET  THAT  HABIT 


AT 


Joe   Poheim 

THE  TAILOR 


806-812  Market  Street 
SAN  FRANCISCO 


THE  NEW  COLLEGE  CUT 

Soft  Roll  Coat 
High  Cut  Vest 
Narrow  Trousers 


We  Fit  You  as  You  Want  to  be  Fitted 
at  MODERATE  PRICES 


September  1 — Hoot  Mon  Greig  arrives  from  Scotland  with  imported  cap  agency. 


United  States            ^11 

Depository               5ft 

WL                Organized 
18  9  2 

A.  W.  Naylor,  President                                                                   •   F.  L.  Naylor,  Vice-President 
Wm.  E.  Woolsey,  Vice-President                                                      Frank  C.  Mortimer,  Cashier 

W.  F.  Morrish,  Asst.  Cashier 

FIRST  NATIONAL  BANK 

BERKELEY,  CAL. 

BERKELEY  BANK  of  SAVINGS 

AND  TRUST  CO. 

A.  W.  Naylor,  President                                                      F.  L.  Naylor,  Vice-President 
Wm.  E.  Woolsey,  Vice-President                                       W.  S.  Wood,  Cashier  and  Trust  Officer 

J.  S.  Mills,  Asst.  Cashier 

Trunks,  Bags  and  Suit  Cases 

Furniture,  Carpets  and  Linoleum 

Coal  and  Gas  Stoves 

PIONEER    HOME    FURNISHERS 

Durgin,  Gompertz  Co. 

2180   SHATTUCK  AVE. 

Phone  B.  1110  BERKELEY 


September  2 — Pop  Kessler  and  Old  Man  Watts  rushed  Chi  Phi. 


Louis  Scheeline 


The 

College 
Tailor 


Pacific  Coast  Leader 

of 
Fashions  for  Students 


406  Fourteenth  St.      Oakland 


September  3— Are  pledged.     Ichabod  Rose  intoxicated  with  joy. 


The  Place  to  Eat 


WINSTON'S 


Candies 

Ice  Cream  Soda 

Fancy  Pastry 


2 1 48  Center  Street,  Berkeley,  California 

Telephone  Berkeley  3642 


WILLARD   BEATTY 

"Now,  fellows,  we  must  consider  some  serious  prob- 
lems. Fatimas  and  beer  must  not  be  on  hand  at  our 
banquet.  We  must  wear  our  plugs;  we  must  drive  them 
to  dances,  but  no  taxicrabs.  No  fellow  must  order  over 
a  ten-cent  drink  at  the  Sign  of  the  Coon.  Ragging  must 
be  abolished.  It  is  a  fallacy  that  this  brings  the  men 
closer  to  the  women.  Candidate  for  office  should  speak 
at  meetings,  sing  a  song,  dance  the  Arizona  Tommy,  the 
near-Texas,  or  something  like  that.  Wear  your  plugs 
today.  Be  at  the  meeting  tomorrow.  Read  my  daily  ads. 
in  the  Daily  Cal.    Good-bye." 


FLORAL 
DECORATORS 


Telephones 


BERKELEY  1722 
OAKLAND  576 


H.    M.    SANBORN   COMPANY 


NURSERIES: 
Derby  and  Grant,  Berkeley 
Glen  Ave.,  near  Piedmont 

Oakland,  Cal. 


=FLORISTS= 
SEEDSMEN 
NURSERYMEN 


FLORAL  SHOPS  : 

University  and  Shattuck,  Berkeley 
Bancroft  and  Telegraph,  Berkeley 
517  Fourteenth  Street,  Oakland,  Cal. 


September  4 — Foulke  registers  for  primaries  in  Alameda. 


Private  Exchange  Berkeley  6330  Home  F  1587 

"THE  BEST  GROCERY" 

W.  H.  DEMENT,  Proprietor 

FANCY   and   STAPLE   GROCERIES 
HOME-MADE   CAKES 

Southwest  Corner  TELEGRAPH  and    BANCROFT,  Berkeley,  California 
The  Best   by   Every  Test 


And  fain  would  bless  you  while  he  swears. 

Himself,  in  other  days,  has  been 

A  trifle  procs  to  noise  and  sin — 

A  trifle  skittish — and  he  knows 

The  joy  of  making  day  begin 

When  honest  clocks  announce  its  close. 

He  understands  the  wild  delight 

Of  prying  off  the  lid  of  night. 

And  ripping  up  the  atmosphere 

With  cat-calls  which  the  planets  hear. 

He  knows  the  song,  the  college  yell, 

The  joy  of  raising  merry  Hell 

At  midnight  when  the  neighbors  sleep  (?) 

And  little  owls  their  vigils  keep. 

He  knows  the  mad  exultant  bump 

Of  dread  pianos  when  they  thump. 

And  honking  autos  when  they  blare 

Their  turmoil  on  the  midnight  air. 

All  this  he  knows ;  but,  gentlemen, 
The  years  have  run  away  since  then, 
And  now  he  lays  him  down  to  sleep, 
And  prays  the  Lord  his  soul  to  keep ; 
And,  while  about  it,  sometimes  pleads 
That  He,  who  understands  the  needs 
Of  tired  men,  will  drop  a  shot 
Of  dynamite,  or  something  hot, 


Pictures  aTl  University  Events 

We  carry  a  complete  line  of  pictures  of  all  College  Events.     Our 

old  negatives  are  preserved  and  any  pictures  desired  can  be 

had.     Special  attention  given  to  Mail  Orders. 

GLESSNER,  MORSE  &  GEARY,  Inc. 

BOOKSELLERS— STATIONERS 

BERKELEY,  CALIFORNIA. 


September  7 — Woman's  suffrage  carries.    Hock  Heyer  very  active. 


Harold  Brayton,   '11 
Ernst   Geary,    '06 
John  D.  Hartigan,   '10 
Eugene  R.  Hallett,  '05 


Fred   Hornick,    '14 
J.  V.  Mendenhall,  '00 
Robert  H.    Moulton,    '11 
Dean  G.  Witter,  '07 


University  of  California  Men 


WITH 


Louis   Sloss  &  Co. 


E.  R.  Lilienthal President 

Leon   Sloss Vice-Pres.,   79 

Louis  Sloss Vice-Pres.,  '81 

Joseph  Sloss Treasurer,  '87 

Charles   R.    Blyth Secretary 

M.  C.  Sloss Director 

Eugene  R.  Hallett Manager 


Investment    Securities 

ALASKA  COMMERCIAL  BLDG. 
San  Francisco,  Cal. 


J  arvis 
Hardware    Co. 

2311  TELEGRAPH  AVENUE 


ATHLETIC   GOODS 


Buy/?*  California 


We  Make 


Pennants,  Flags,  Banners 
Felt  Pillow  Covers,  better 
and  at  lower  prices  than 
eastern  makers. 


Emerson    Mfg.    Co. 

109  Stevenson  Street 
SAN  FRANCISCO,  CAL. 


Modern  Science 
Says: 


If  you  desire  perfectly  clean 
and  pure  milk  you  must  sub- 
mit it  to  pasteurization. 

We  have  the  only  pasteurizing 
plant  in  Alameda  County.  If  you 
will  call  to  inspect  it  you  will  see 
why  the  dictum  of  science  is  fol- 
lowed and  why  as  a  result  all  our 
customers  are  satisfied. 


Varsity  Creamery  Co. 

2113  University  Ave. 

Phone  Berkeley  65 


September  8 — McCormack  and  Snook  fight  duel.     Both  are  half  shot. 


HOTEL  SHATTUCK 

BERKELEY,    CALIFORNIA 

NOAH  W.  GRAY,  Manager 


HOTEL  SHATTUCK— Corner  Shattuck  Avenue  and  Allston  Way,  Berkeley,  California. 
"The  Hotel  under  the  C." 

THE    SHATTUCK   caters    to    first-class    trade.      Service    unsurpassed. 
Cuisine    unexcelled.       Fraternity    and    inter  -  fraternity    banquets,    re- 
unions and  dances  at  the  Shattuck. 
Only  three  minutes  from  the  Campus  of  the  University  of  California ; 
in  sight  of  the  Big  C. 

Fireproof;  concrete  and  steel ;  centrally  located,  near  both  railroad  stations. 

Only  short  distance  from  main  junction  of  the  street  car  junction  of  Berkeley. 

From  the  roof  garden  of  the  Shattuck  may  be  obtained  a  view  of  the  entire 

Bay  region,  including  Oakland,  San  Francisco,  Marin  County,  Contra  Costa 

County.      Picturesque  and  enchanting  scenery. 

Automobile  drives  begin  and  end  at  the  Hotel  Shattuck,  which  is  a  favorite 
rendezvous  for  motoring  parties.  There  are  delightful  drives  in  the  city  limits 
of  Berkeley.  From  here  the  finest  boulevard  in  Alameda  County  is  reached 
in  fifteen  minutes,  offering  a  superb  speedway  for  more  than  a  hundred  miles. 


September  9 — Prom.  Committees  named.     Beatty  makes  debut  in  announcement  column. 


CHOOSING  YOUR  BANK 


pHIS  bank  has  all  the  inducements  in  the 
way  of  service  and  security  to  enable  busi- 
ness men  and  others  to   choose  it  wisely  as 
Their  bank. 


AFFILIATED    WITH 


UNIVERSITY    SAVINGS    BANK 

BERKELEY  NATIONAL  BANK 


Charles  Lyons 

LONDON    TAILOR 


MAIN  STORE 

719  Market  Street,  near  3rd.  Street,  San  Francisco 

BRANCH  STORE 

958  Broadway,   Oakland 


An  extensive  and  elegant  assortment 
of  patterns  to  sellect  from   :     :     :     : 

Suits  from   $25.00  up 


September  10 — Jimmie  Hill  encounters  Romance  outside  Miss  Head's  School. 

A  New  Route 
To  The  East 

TRAVEL  VIA 

Western   Pacific 

"The  Feather  River  Route" 


EVERYTHING   NEW 

STEEL   EQUIPMENT 

ELECTRIC   LIGHTED   THROUGHOUT 


Through  Standard  andTourist  Sleeping  Cars 

To 

Chicago  and  St.  Louis 

Dining  Car  Service  All  The  Way 

Call  on  or  write 

W.   B.  TOWNSEND 

Dist.  Freight  and  Pass.  Agt. 

1326   BROADWAY 

PHONE  OAK.  132  OAKLAND 


September  11— Beatty  has  only  one  announcement  in  the  Cal. 


YOUNG     MEN 
OF    THE    DAY 


The  young  man  of  to-day  who  is  a  success  in  the 

business  and  college  world,  is  abreast  of  the  hour, 

not  only  in  his  views,  but  also  in  his  dress. 

There  are  no  suits  more  up  to  the  minute  than 

those  we  are  now  displaying,  comprising  the  very 

newest  designs  in  fine  and  exclusive  clothing. 

The    departments    of   Shoes,    Hats,    Furnishings 

(everything  that   men  wear)    are    displaying   the 

smartest  of  the  new  season's  productions. 

No  other  store  is  so  well  equipped  to  serve  you 
this  season. 


HASTINGS 

CLOTHING 

COMPANY 

POST   and  GRANT   AVENUE 


September  12 — Gribner  is  seen  on  the  Campus  for  first  time. 


"  The  Ships  with  the  Perject  Service. ' ' 

There  is  no  more  pleasing  or  delightful  way  of  traveling  to 

LOS  ANGELES,  SAN  DIEGO  OR 
SAN  FRANCISCO 

than  on  the  twin  turbine  steamships  the 

Yale   &   Harvard 

Regular,  rapid  service  with  all  the  comforts  of  a  modern  hotel, 
while  traveling  at  the  speed  of  an  express  train. 

Folders,  Tickets  and  Information  at 
Agencies  in  All  Cities,  or 

PACIFIC  NAVIGATION  CO. 

680  Market  Street 
SAN  FRANCISCO 


Sacred  as  the  A.  S.  U.  C.  constitution  was,  no  one  wanted  it  Beatified. 


c. . 

J.  HEISEMAN,  I 

BERKELEY 

nc. 

THE    PROPER  WEARING    APPAREL 
FOR  COLLEGE  MEN   AND  OTHERS 

W.  L.  Woodward,  Manager 

Against  the  building  on  your  lot; 
Or  open  up  the  ground  and  make 
One  frat  house  less,  for  good 's  sake. 

Don't  be  alarmed,  dear  boys,  for  I 
Have  often  prayed  without  reply. 
But,  honest  now,  'tween  man  and  man, 
Let  me  suggest  a  better  plan ; 
Just  slow  her  down  a  bit,  and  give 
Us  older  chaps  a  chance  to  live, 
A  chance  to  sleep  in  peace  at — say 
From  two  A.  M.  to  break  of  day — 
With  now  and  then  a  night  thrown  in 
Sans  cat-call,  yell  or  other  din. 
And,  furthermore,  if  you  could  plan 
To  put  a  muzzle  on  that  man 
"Who  loves  her  truly,"  shouting  out 
His  awful  passion  and  his  doubt 
From  eastern  windows,  night  and  day, 
Our  gratitude  would  be  your  pay. 

No  more,  sweet  gentlemen,  you  see 
I'm  gambling  on  your  chivalry. 
It  is  not  malice  makes  you  sing 
Like  tomcats  in  the  early  spring, 
But  indiscretion — youth  elate — 
Which  bubbles  over  while  you  wait. 

Not  mine  the  hand  your  bliss  to  stay ; 
Each  dog,  I  know,  must  have  his  day. 
But  when  the  town  is  fairly  red 
And  A.  M.  stars  creep  overhead, 
Please  call  it  off  and  go  to  bed. 


It's  a  long  head  whose  neck  has  no  turning. 


Speed 


Safety 


Comfort 


San  Francisco 


a 


Overland  Limited" 


Ogden,    Salt    Lake,    Denver,   St.    Paul,    Chicago,    Omaha, 
Kansas   City,   St.   Louis 


Electric  Lighted Steam  Heated 

No  Smoke No  Dust 

Diner Library—  —Observation  Car 


Round  Trip  Summer  Excursion  Tickets  Sold  Certain  Dates 

May June July August 

Are  Good  on  This  Train 

Our  Agents  will  be  glad  to  give  you  any  information  desired 


SOUTHERN   PACIFIC 


L.  RICHARDSON  C.  J.  MALLEY 

Freight  &  Passenger  Agt.,  Oakland      City  Ticket  Agt. 

Broadway  and  13th  Sts. ,  Oakland,  Cal. 

Phone  Oak.  162  or  Home  A  5224 

or 

Oakland,   First  and  Broadway 

Oakland,  Seventh  and  Broadway 

Oakland,  16th  Street  Depot 


J.  S.  ROSS 

City  Passenger  Agt. 


September  15 — One  too  many  bacilli  in  Dick  Hill's  milk. 


YOUR    PHOTOGRAPH    WORK 

will  not  prove  satisfactory  and  pleasing  unless 
special  care  is  given  to  the 

DEVELOPING  and  PRINTING  WITHIN  48  HOURS 

we  guarantee  each  position,  giving  you  as  finished  a  product  as  film 
will  produce.      Enlargements  are  included  within  above  time  limit. 

MUELLER'S     PHARMACY,   2129  UNIVERSITY  AVE. 

"WHERE  ALL  THE  CARS  STOP." 


Vickery-  Atkins  &  Torrey 


(INC.) 


PAINTINGS  in  O  I  L  and 
WATER  COLOR.  Etch- 
ings and  Engravings,  Objects  of 
Art.  PICTURE  FRAMES 
designed  and  made.  JADES 
Rare  Oriental  Porcelains, 
Japanese  Prints  for  Collectors. 


550  Sutter  St.,  San  Francisco,  California 


SAVE  MONEY 
TIME  and  WORRY 


Try  H inks  First 


RELIABLE     DRY     GOODS 


J.  F.    HINK&SON 

BERKELEY,    CAL. 


MONTHLY  CONTRACTS  MADE 


PHONE  BERKELEY  41 


C.   F.   AH  LB  ERG 

THE  OLDEST  and  MOST  RELIABLE 

TAILOR 

Catering  to  the  High-Grade  College  Trade 

Dry  Cleaning  and  Dyeing— Ladies'  Work  a  Specialty 


2312  Telegraph  Avenue 


Berkeley,   California 


September  16 — Woman  pays  revolver  call  on  "Pink"   Simpson. 


A  STORE  FOR  MEN  and  BOYS 


Keller  Quality 
Tailoring 
Clothing 
Hats  and 
Haberdashery 


— A  store  that  has  held  the  confidence  of  its 
patrons  for  33  years. 

— An  out-of-the-rut  store,  where  precedent 
serves  as  precedent  only  when  precedent 
has  such  merit  as  to  be  worthy. 

— A  store  where  quality  reigns  supreme. 

— A  store  where  the  satisfaction  of  each 
customer  is  the  aim  of  every  transaction. 

— A  store  where  prices  lend  attractiveness 
to  the  merchandise  they  adorn. 


M.   J.    KELLER   CO. 

Washington,  Bet.  13th  and  14th  Oakland,  California 


Z^^mS 

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BOOKS 


FLOWERS 


THE  FRIENDLY  SHOP 


B.   W.  Perks  Company 

FLOWERS  FRATERNITT  JEWELRY  BOOKS 


2315  Telegraph  Avenue 


Phone   2804 


Berkeley,  California 


Things  are  picking  up — Bill  Bagby. 


XT  FT*  o  I     We  are   Designers  and    Manu- 
*    »-J  O  .     facturers  of  up-to-date 


Medals 

Badges 

Cups 

Trophies 

Emblems 

Seals 

Fraternity  Pins 


Jewels  for  Col- 
leges, Schools, 
Societies  and 
Clubs, 

Designs  and  Estimates  upon  request 

GEORGE  LARSON  &  CO. 

Jewelers  Building 

150  POST  STREET       SAN  FRANCISCO 


F.W.  FOSS  CO. 


Coal 

Lumber 

Building 
Materials 


Phone    Berkeley   1295 
Home    Phone     F    1295 


2181    Shattuck   Ave. 


BERKELEY 


CAL. 


E.  L.  SMITH 
H.  SCHARMAN 

$?e    liberty 

CANDIES 
ICE  CREAM 
FROZEN   DESSERTS 

Phones:  Oakland  3194 
Home  A  3194 

1215   Broadway,   Between 

12th  and    13th   Streets 

Oakland 

ARE  YOU 


hard  to  please? 

particular  about  what  you  wear? 
fastidious  in  your  tastes? 
insistent  on  right  prices? 


If  you  are,  and  you  should  be,  GO  to  the 

COLLEGE  TOWN   SHOP 

Outfitters  for  Men — on  Telegraph  Avenue  near  Sather  Gate 


Bertram  S.  Booth,  Manager 


Phone   Berkeley  4209 


Every  dog  has  his  day — Medicos. 


McDonald 


Collett 


Fashionable  Made  to  Order  Clothes 


We  Feature  the  Making  of  Clothes  for  Young 

Men 


Our  Great  Leader 
Genuine  Hockanum  Blue   Serge  Suit  to  Order, 


$32.00 


Mcdonald  s#  collett 

TWO  BIG  STORES 

2184-86  Mission  Street  741  Market  Street 

SAN  FRANCISCO 


September  19 — Beatty  evidently  ill.     Has  no  announcement  in  Cal. 


HARRY   HARRIS 


"Hello  dere !  where  yer  goin'?  To 
de  Smawk  Shop?  Yes.  I'm  goin'  down, 
too.  Hello  dere !  Shorty,  John.  Hallo ! 
Krig.  Hallo!  Steve.  Hallo!  Todd. 
Hallo!  Monk.  [To  bench  bums.]  Shoore, 
I  know  Farrgo  Rose ;  he  leeves  right 
down  near  our  ranch.  We  both  started 
together  in  agricoolture,  but  Farrgo  was 
a  Chi  Phi  and  eet  takes  longer  den. 
Hallo  dere!  Pres'dent  Wheeler;  got  de 
makin's? 

"Yoo  goin'  to  de  Berkeley  High  dance? 
Fine  girls  down  dere.  I  tell  'em  I'm  Beta 
and  den  everyting  all  right.  Deed  you 
see  de  peepin  I  was  wid  last  Sunday  at  de 
Greek  Teatre.  Soom  bear.  Shee's  from 
Oakland,  too.  I  always  go  wid  de  fine 
ones.  Waal,  I  see  you  at  de  smoker  next 
week,  eh?    Adios  !  " 


WADE  SNOOK 

"My  father  is  a  lawyer  and  says  the  installa- 
tion of  the  lights  on  the  Campus  by  the  Welfare 
Committee  is  special  legislation  against  us 
queeners  and  is,  therefore,  illegal.  It  works 
great  hurt  on  me,  'Stan'  Bryan,  Johnny  Beck, 
Charlie  Rogers,  Frank  Partridge,  Dorsey  Ste- 
phens and  Harry  McClelland.  Don't  bother  me  ; 
I'm  a  student  this  semester.  Say,  pretty  good- 
looking  co-ed.  just  passed,  eh?  Well,  I  must 
get  out  on  the  track  now ;  training's  begun,  and 
Walter  wants  us  distance  men  to  get  a  good 
start.  Sure,  the  Alpha  Phis  are  the  best  on  the 
Campus.  No,  the  Fijis  are  affiliated  with  the 
Tri  Delts.  They're  O.  K.,  too.  Going  up  to 
Cloverdale  this  Saturday;  fine  country  up  there. 
Have  you  see  the  new  house?  It's  fine;  makes 
the  Zetes  sore,  too.    Well,  I'll  see  you  after  class." 


The  Alpha  Female  of  the  Species  is  more  deadly  than  the  male. 

MARSHALL  STEEL  CO. 

LEADING  TAILORS 
and  DRY  CLEANERS  of 

BERKELEY 

I I 

2126  CENTER   STREET 


MARSHALL  STEEL,  Mgr. 

California,  '04 


In  The  Morning  Drink 


WHY? 


M.  J.  B. 
Coffee 

In  The  Afternoon  Try 

Tree  Tea         It  Cups! 

Black  or  Green 
M.   J.    BRANDENSTEIN  &  CO.  San  Francisco 


September  30 — Lloyd  Sloane  takes  Bonnestein    prize  at  A  T  A  party. 


BE    A    MUSICIAN 

B 

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^nS-*!!""-  "'.  f—ffivf' 

G  N 

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H  G 

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C 

alifornia    Band    and 

Orchestra  Institute,  Inc. 

ALL  KINDS  OF  MUSICAL  INSTRUMENTS 

AND  SUPPLIES 

Buy,   Sell  and  Repair.      Best  Bargains  and 

Lowest  In 

stall  men  t  Terms 

Phone: 

40  Haight  Street 

park  850                   San  Francisco 

The 
J  as.  W.  Edwards  Co. 


DEPOT    FOR 


-THE   BEST  = 
DENTAL  SUPPLIES 

Of   Recognized   Quality  and 
Manufacture. 


» 


San  Francisco 
Oakland 
San  Jose 


Los  Angeles 

Sacramento 

Fresno 


CALIFORNIA 


The  German  Savings  and  Loan  Society 

Savings  (The  German  Bank)  Commercial 

Member  of  the  Associated  Savings  Banks  of  San  Francisco. 

526  California  Street,     :    :    :    :     SAN  FRANCISCO,  CAL. 

Guaranteed  Capital  $  1,200,000.00 

Capital  actually  paid  up  in  cash 1,000,000.00 

Reserve  and  Contingent  Funds 1,631,282.84 

Employees'  Pension  Fund 131,748.47 

Deposits  December  30,   1911 46,205,741.40 

Total  Assets   48,837,024.24 

Remittance  may  be  made  by  Draft,  Post-office  or  Express  Company's  Money  Orders,  or  coin  by  Express. 

Office  Hours:  10  o'clock  a.  m.  to  3  o'clock  p.  m.,  except  Saturdays  to  12  o'clock  m.  and  Saturday  evenings 
from  6:30  o'clock  p.  m.  to  8  o'clock  p.  m.  for  receipt  of  deposits  only. 

Officers:  N.  Ohlandt,  president;  George  Tourny,  vice-president  and  manager;  J.  W.  Van  Bergen, 
vice-president;  A.  II.  R.  Schmidt,  cashier;  William  Herrmann,  assistant  cashier;  A.  H.  Muller,  secretary; 
G.  J.  O.  Folte  and  Wm.  D.  Newhouse,  assistant  secretaries;  Goodfellow,  Eells  &  Orrick,  general  attorneys. 

Board  of  Directors:  N.  Ohlandt,  George  Tourny,  J.  W.  Van  Bergen,  Ign.  Steinhart,  I.  N.  Walter, 
F.  Tillmann,  Jr.,  E.  T.  Kruse,  W.  S.  Goodfellow  and  A.  H.  R.  Schmidt. 

The  following  branches  for  receipt  and  payment  of  deposits  only : 

Mission  Branch,  2572  Mission  Street,  between  Twenty-first  and  Twenty-second  Streets.  C.  W.  Heyer, 
manager. 

Richmond   District   Branch,    601    Clement    Street,   corner   Seventh   Avenue.      W.    C.    Heyer,    manager. 

Haight  Street  Branch,  1456  Haight  Street,  between  Masonic  Avenue  and  Ashbury  Street,  O.  F. 
Paulsen,  manager. 


December  8 — Occident  prizes  given  away. 


The  Best 


STEAMSHIPS 

Bear-Beaver-Rose  City 

"The  Big  3" 

S;iil    Every    Five    Days    Between 

Los  Angeles=San  Francisco=Portland 

Through    tickets    sold    to    all.  points    in    the    United 

States,  Canada  and  Mexico  in  connection  with  these 

luxuriant  passenger  steamers.      Write  for  low  rates, 

sailings  and  full  information. 

The  San  Francisco  &  Portland  Steamship  Co. 

A.   Ottinger,   General   Agent, 
722   MARKET   STREET,   SAN   FRANCISCO 

S.    H.   Thompson,   Agent, 
2105  SHATTUCK  AVENUE,   BERKELEY,  CAL. 


No  one  ever  had  to  say  to  J.  J.  Miller,  "Speak  for  yourself,  John." 


"MIKE"   SULLIVAN 

"I'm  not  going  to  mix  in  politics.  Ha  !  ha  !  ha  !  How're 
things  comin'?  That's  right,  that's  right,  sure.  I'm  no 
politician.  Sure  not.  I  said  so  when  I  started  college.  Milt 
Farmer  and  Bill  Hayes  told  me  to  say  so.  Why  I've  said  so 
ever  since. 

"Why,  I  wasn't  in  that  Tweed-Gribner  ring.  I  was  with 
Gribner,  and  you  surely  couldn't  learn  any  politics  from  him. 
And  Heyer  and  Dyer  were  like  two  peas  in  a  pod.  Miller 
was  a  man  in  those  days,  too.  McClelland  and  Stephens 
were  just  queening;  couldn't  tell  whether  they  were  honest 
or  going  to  run  for  office.  Then  some  voted  for  Foulke ;  I 
knew  either  he  or  Rust  would  win.     So  you  can  see  I  don't 

belong  to  any  ring.     I'm  no  politician.     If  you  don't  believe  me,  phone  down 

to  Old  Man  Burke  and  ask  him." 


S 


MART,  SNAPPY  CLOTHES 
FOR  THE  COLLEGE  MAN 
AT  REASONABLE  PRICES 


College   Tailors 


TELEGRAPH 
AVENUE 


BERKELEY 
CAL. 


He  who  laughs  last  is  generally  in  Agriculture. 


Alfred  Lilienfeld  &  Co 


OVERCOAT 

Specialists 


KEARNY  ST.  at  POST 


THE     LARGEST    CLOTHING     STORE     ON    THE     PACIFIC     COAST 


L.  F.  SHEAN 


Agents 

JUAN   DE   FUCA  CIGARS 

CLEAR     HAVANA 


J.  L.  TAYLOR 


VARSITY  SMOKE  SHOP 


Cigar  Store 


HIGH  GRADE  CIGARS,   CIGARETTES  and 
SMOKERS'  ARTICLES 


Telephone  Berkeley  3503 

2301  Telegraph  Avenue 

BERKELEY,   CALIFORNIA 


Billiard  Parlor 


E. 

H.  Rollins  & 

Sons 

INVESTMENT 

BONDS 

Boston 
San 

New  York 
Francisco 

Chicago               Denver 
Los  Angeles 

December  9 — Harry  Harris  appears  in  new  vest.     Who  got  the  pajamas? 
ESTABLISHED  1880 

ALAMEDA  CAFE 

JACOB  PETERSEN,  Proprietor 

COFFEE  and  LUNCH  HOUSE 

7  Market  Street  AND  17  Steuart  Street 

SAN  FRANCISCO 


The  COURIER 

Publishing  Company 

r^f"1  t~\  f" Y^1*C?    at  tne  disposal  °f 

JL     I   111  Lvl  ^    University   Students 

2008  Addison  St.,  BERKELEY,  CAL. 

H.  S.  Howard,  Mgr.       Phone  Berkeley  1028 


™&  3tecdkcraft  Sbop 


2146  CENTER  STREET 

Materials  for  Embroidery,  Stamping  and  Designing 
Gifts  in  Handicraft,  Metal  Pottery,  Jewelry 
phone  Berkeley  2813  and  Dainty  Embroidered  Articles. 

BERKELEY 


January  2 — "Ken"  Monteagle  held  for  leprosy. 


"C 


LOTHES,  Says  an  English 
Writer,  are  the  Symbol  of  Power 
and  the  test  of  Personality  all  over 
the  World.'' 


Byron  Rutley 

MAKE  THAT  KIND  OF 

CLOTHES 


1327  Washington  Street,  near  Fourteenth  Street 
Oakland 


Labor  Day  Proclamation 

Oyez !  Oyez  !  Oyez  !  Know  yez !  Know  yez !  Know  yez !  Ladies,  gentlemen  and  me- 
chanics, too  (or  mechanics  lb;  I  cannot  remember  which),  assembled  on  this  field,  which 
is  biennially  besmirched,  biennially  besmirched,  I  say,  with  the  gore  of  those  blood  red 
lobsters  from  Prof.  Clark's  little  seminary,  or  is  it  cemetery,  down  the  bay.  In  these  times 
when  a  hat,  a  hatpin  or  a  trouser  be  the  only  distinction  between  a  man,  co-ed,  pelican, 
grizzly  bear  or  other  animal,  we  are  gathered  together  for  a  common  purpose  and  yet  an 
uncommon  one. 

The  cards  of  destiny  have  fallen.  This  morning  the  whole  pack  of  us  were  on  deck, 
and  each  man  did  hold  a  spade — each  serf  did  take  his  pick.  There  were  many  flushes 
and  the  king  did  have  a  royal  one.  Several  of  the  Irish  contingent  held  pat  hands,  and  we 
have  it  straight  that  Clark  and  Snook,  strictly  in  the  line  of  duty,  drew  a  pair  of  queens. 
Ye  co-eds  even  did  get  in  the  game,  for  many  held  trays  at  the  noonday  repast,  and  we  are 
told  that  with  them  the  lack  of  feed-funds — two-bits,  please — did  raise  the  deuce. 

But,  snuf — a  new  game  doth  call  us  forth  this  merry  May  morning.  We  are  gathered 
this  day  from  all  ye  colleges,  ye  men  of  letters,  ye  tenders  of  the  peaceful  bossy  cow,  ye 
purveyors  of  plumbing,  ye  rawboned  lawyers,  ye  miners,  ye  uncivil  civil  engineers,  ye 
examiners  of  bacilli,  ye  co-eds  and  what  not.  Having  now  defied  death  in  his  most  terrifying 
form,  having  partaken  of  the  husky  apple  pies,  which  know  no  apples,  and  that  boon  to  all 
humanity  the  square  green  pea,  and  each  round  stomach  being  filled  to  repletion  with  a 
square  meal,  we  await  the  feats  of  skill  and  skill  of  feet.  E'en  in  the  bosoms  of  all  of  us 
there  is  a  feeling — there  is  a  feeling  (we  surely  had  enuf  at  noon — that  we  are  now  to  witness 
more  profound  spectacles  than  ever  sat  on  professors'  noses.      And  it  is  e'en  so.      To  the 


Man  proposes,  Pelican  disposes. 


"BLONDY"  INGRAM 

"Who  be  this  here  shear  that  blows  round  these  parts 
in  this  'ere  red  bus?    Be  I  strolling  down  the  path  yester 

morn  and  this  here  dame  blows  up  unheralded.    B'  G 

I  was  unaware ;  never  focused  the  woman  before  ;  me 
beak  never  scented  this  petrol ;   m'  tympanum  was  off  the 

job.    I  turns  around  m'  carcass  and  B'  G the  fill  was 

nigh  onto  me  and  not  fer  stoppin'.  All  brakes  were 
being  set.  I  steps  aside  p'lite  as  this  here  Sir  Walter  or 
Gus  Chesterfield.  The  scissor  drops  her  headpiece  most 
graceful  in  a  bow.  I  focused  the  number  and  lamped  the 
bear.  Well,  s'long,  mus'  be  goin'  on ;  off  fer  Brasfield's. 
Likely  the  butcher  will  do  a  little  shorning.  Come  on 
over  to  the  shrine  when  the  cuckoo  cooks  twelve  and 
dine  hearty." 


LYMAN   GRIMES 

"How  are  you?  I'm  charmed  to  meet  you,  I'm 
sure.  Hello!  hello!  hello!  (Who  are  those  fellows?) 
Well,  anyway,  every  man  with  an  A.  S.  U.  C.  card 
is  a  vote.     That  reminds  me  of  a  good  one. 

"Perhaps,  in  fact,  sans  doutc,  you  have  heard  the 
story  of  the  Shadrack  of  Badrak  and  the  daughter  of 
the  Egyptian  King.  You  haven't?  Well,  I'll  tell  you 
the  one  about  a  certain  denizen  of  the  Moorish  pal- 
ace. Now,  in  this  beautiful  palatial  abode  of  which 
I'm  speaking  was  confined  the  newly-wedded  wife 
of  the  Turkish  na(rrya)bob.  She  wore  the  finest  of 
silks  and  satins,  was  resplendent  with  jewels  and 
possessed,  ah!  ah!  the  divinest  of  figures.  Her 
ankle  turned,  had  turned  many  a  head,  neck  and 
shoulders.  Her  nut-brown  hair  and  olive  skin  were 
ravissant.  But,  ah !  she  liked  not  her  new  Turkish 
trophy.  For  there  was  enslaved  in  her  meshes  the 
captain  of  the  guard,  Obak  Melachrino.  Each  night  outside  her  window 
Obak's  voice  would  be  lifted  up  in  songs  of  love,  and  she  would  drop  to  him 
notes  on  the  finest  of  tissue.  Engowned  in  silken  pajamas  she  would  ensconce 
herself  upon  the  golden  rail  of  the  balcony  below  the  minaret.  One  night 
ne — Jigger'  Here  comes  the  Students'  Affairs  Committee.  Glad  to  have  met 
you,  and  you,  and  you." 


tf 


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Fl^NClSCO 


121'\  SECOND  ST. 


January  21 — John  R.  and  Tod  dispute  with  taxi  drivers.    Latter  settle  dispute. 


Distinctive 
Footwear 


Shoes  for  every  occasion — from  a  ball-room  slipper  to  a  mountain  boot — 
that  will  meet  the  exacting  requirements  of  college  men  and  women  as  to 

style,  quality  and  price. 

SOMMER  &  KAUFMANN 


119-125  Grant  Ave. 


SAN  FRANCISCO 


836-842  Market  St. 


SYDNEY   SHORT   LINE 

NEW  SERVICE,  19  DAYS  FROM 

SAN  FRANCISCO 

Via   HONOLULU   and    TUTUILA   (SAMOA) 

SPLENDID  STEAMERS  of  OCEANIC 

STEAMSHIP  CO.  (Spreckels  Line), 

10,000  tons  displacement,  sail  from  San  Francisco, 

July  2,  July  30  (new  schedule)  and  every  28  days 

thereafter  on  a  19-DAY  SERVICE  TO  SYDNEY, 

AUSTRALIA,  with  stop  at   HONOLULU  and 

SAMOA. 

THE  QUICK  &  ATTRACTIVE  ROUTE  TO  THE  ANTIPODES. 

Round  world,  $600  1st  class:  $375  2nd  class,  via  Ceylon  and 
Mediterranean.  (Stop-overs.)  HONOLULU  $110  and  back, 
1st  Class.    Sailing  May  11,  June  1,  22  &  every  2  Weeks. 


OCEANIC  STEAMSHIP  CO., 


673   MARKET  ST. 

SAN  FRANCISCO 


finest  barbaric  music  that  can  be  strained  from  our  ragged  band,  we  shall  see  brave  knights 
do  battle  unto  the  very  death.  We  shall  behold  the  freshest  of  horses  charge  with  measured 
step  to  uncertain  death  under  the  guidance  of  far  fresher  horsemen.  Courage  of  champions, 
blood  of  heroes,  love  of  ladies ! 

The  few  and  simple  rules  which  govern  the  jousts  that  are  to  instruct  you  in  the 
knightly  arts  of  chivalry  I  shall  now  relate  : 

1 — No  brickbats,  pelican-aged  eggs  and  vegetables  or  Irish  confetti  are  to  be  allowed. 


January  28 — Lights  installed  on  Campus.     Snook  and  Bryan  considerably  peeved. 


February  1 — Steve  Malatesta  not  seen  on  bench.    Harris,  Wheeler,  Quinn,  Anderson,  present. 


TAFT   &  PENNOYER  BUILDING 


Oakland's  Largest  Fire-Proof 
Department  Store 


February  2 — Pete  Palmer  goes  to  Encinal  dance.     Pete  is  easily  influenced. 

Taft  &  Pennoyer  Co. 
40  Large  Departments 


ALWAYS  well  stocked  with  the 
Choicest  Merchandise,  marked  at 
the  most  reasonable  figures  :  :   :  : 


College  Trade  is  Solicited 

for  the  reason  that  we  have  found 
cultured  and  intelligent  people  be- 
come and  remain  our  customers,  and 
because  it  is  far  more  pleasureable 
to  give  value  and  quality  to  persons 
who  are  capable  of  appreciating  them. 


Glay  at  Fourteenth  and  Fifteenth  Streets 
Oakland  California 


February  5 — Spot  appears  on  Stan  Bryan's  suit. 


The  combatants  have  an  inherent  right  to  kill  themselves. 

2 — There  will  be  no  throwing  of  bracelets,  diamond  necklaces,  false  teeth  or  other 
articles  of  personal  adornment  at  the  handsome  knights  who  distinguish  themselves  in  the 
melee. 

3 — No  combatant  shall  butt  with  his  head,  use  his  elbows  or  bite  in  the  clinches. 

4 — No  combatant  shall  smite  his  opponent  forcefully  enuf  to  unloosen  his  corsets. 

5 — No  knight  shall  besmirch  the  good  name  of  the  University,  by  order  of  the  Student 
Welfare  Committee. 

6. — Xo  knight  shall  drink  in  the  plaudits  of  the  multitude,  by  order  of  Platz. 

Sound  the  loud  clarion — let  'er  go ! 


Kodak  finishing 

that  is  unique  in  excellence. 

Orders  received  daily  from  all  parts  of  the 
country,  from  as  far  East  as  Boston  and  even 
from  abroad,  bear  testimony  to  this  excellence. 


BOWMAN 

(Formerly  R.  A.  Leet  k  Co.) 


DRUG  CO. 

1301-1303-1305  Broadway,  Oakland 


Want  Your 
Mind  Fresh  «a 
Active  For 
Exams? 

Then  you'd  better   smoke  a 
light  soothing  harmless 

Gen'l  Arthur 
Mild  Cigar 

10c   and    3    for    25c 

M.  A.  GUNST  &  CO.  Inc. 


Buying  Walk-Over  Shoes  is  not 
experimenting — They  are  shoes  of 
a  known  value — held  up  as  the 
standard  of  comparison  the  world 
over — Our  store  service  makes  buy- 
ing here  a  pleasure. 

Walk-Over  Boot  Shop 

764  Market  Street 

PHELAN  BUILDING 
ONLY  STORE  IN   SAN  FRANCISCO 


February  6 — Another  spot  appears  on  Stan's  suit. 


"Fine  Feathers 
Make  Fine  Birds" 

If  you're  dressed  right  you're  it. 
If  not,  Well  —  they  don't 
know  you. 


STIEGELER  BROS 

TAILORS  TO  MEN 


San  Francisco's  finest  and 
most  up-to-date  tailoring 
establishment     ::     ::     ::     :: 


711  Market  Street 

Next  to  Call  Building  SAN    FRANCISCO 


February  7 — Stan's  suit  goes  to  cleaners. 


H  AG  E  NTS 

for  Men  *s 

Tailoring 

FOREIGN  AND  DOMESTIC  WOOLENS 
521  Twelfth  Street        ---------        OAKLAND 


Phone  Berk.  1852 


Home  F  1430 


Brighton  Market 


Eaton   Brothers 


DEALERS  IN 


Choice  Meats,  Poultry  and  Fish 

Butter  and  Fggs 

Choice  Fruits  and  Vegetables  of 

all  Kinds 


Now  located  at  2535  Telegraph  Ave., 
but  moves  May  1  to  2503  Dwight  Way 


The  Drug  Store 

which  is  run  as  a  city  store 

CITY    SERVICE    AND    CITY 
PRICES 


Farley 's    Pharmacy 

The  Rexall  Store 


TELEGRAPH,  AT  BANCROFT,  ON 

THE  CORNER 

We  Always   Have  What  You  Want 


2066  Howard  Street 
San  Francisco 


468  Twenty-fifth  Street 
Oakland 


February  8 — Miller,  Beatty,  Co-op.  Nelson  and  Gribner  seen  together. 


Girls      Girls      Girls 

Before  Purchasing 

That  new  summer  suit — do  not  fail 
to  see  the  distinctive  patterns  in  sum- 
mery goods  that  S.  CITRON  puts  at 
your  disposal.  The  exclusive  ladies' 
tailor   of   Oakland. 


603  14th  St.,  near  Jefferson 
Phone  Oakland   1896 


Tools 


SHOP  SUPPLIES 

COPPER,  BRASS,  STEEL 

ALUMINUM 

ARTS  AND  CRAFTS  TOOLS 


C.  W.  MARWEDEL 

76-80  First  Street  SAN  FRANCISCO 


Foster  &  Orear 
Confectioners 

Candy  Booth        Ferry  Bldg. 


SAN   FRANCISCO 


ON  THE  CAMPUS 

or 

IN  YOUR  FRATERNITY  HOUSE 

NOTHING 

IS  MORE  APPRECIATED 

THAN 

A  BOX  OF  CHOCOLATES 

OF  COURSE 


Of 


ii 


O"  Quality 


Dry  Goods 
Fancy   Goods 
Cloaks,   Suits 


Millinery 

Children's   Wear 

Men's  Furnishings 


' '  The  Store  of  Certain  Satisfaction 

Maurice  Hirshfeld 

The  White  House 
2100-2104  Shattuck  Ave.,  BERKELEY,  CAL. 

Berkeley's  Foremost   Department  Store 

Telephones  i  Berkeley  1535 
I  Lome  F  24 iq 

Stunning  Styles  in  Ladies'  and  Gentlemen's 

Furnishings  may  be  had  at  Berkeley's 

Foremost  and  Busiest  Department  Store. 

We  always  endeavor  to  treat  our  Student 

friends  with  utmost  care  and  consideration. 

We  are  always  ready  to  consider  your 

local  propositions. 

Call  when  in  need  of  any  of  our  specialties 

and  we  will  do  the  rest. 

Make  the  Prices  Right. 


February  9 — Progressive  party  is  formed. 


Students" 
Co- Operative  Society 


COLLEGE  SUPPLIES 

AND 

GENERAL  VARIETY 


UNIVERSITY   OF    CALIFORNIA 


February  12 — Silent  says,  "Hello !  "     Beatty  and  Miller  don't  say  anything. 


Phone  Berkeley  912 


G.  R.  Heath,  Manager 


Berkeley    French 


Creamery 


Certified  Milk  a  Specialty 


2321  Webster  Street 


LEHNHARDT'S 


ART  CONFECTIONERS 


I  can  stand  anything  but 
temptation  and 

Lehnhardt's  Candies 


are  certainly  tempting 

LEHNHARDT'S 
CANDIES 


Store 
1309-1313  Broadway 


Oakland 

California 


J.  Lanzer 


A.  Schwedhelm 


Dwight  Way  Bakery 
and  Restaurant 

Our  Bread  is  the  best  made 
anywhere.  Our  cakes  and 
pastry  are  superior  to  all. 
Give  us  your  trade.  We 
treat  you  right. 

Fraternities  and  Club  Houses  Catered  To 

Phones: 

Berkeley  1305  Home  F  1489 

2109  Dwight  Way        Berkeley 


c 

alif 

ornia-Atlantic 

THROUGH  SERVICE 

s. 

S. 

c 

0. 

SAN  FRANCISCO  TO  NEW  YORK  VIA  PANAMA 

Thirty  Days  in  Transit 

BATES    &    CHESEBROUGH 

General  Agents, 

414  Merchants  Exchange,         - 

SAN 

FRANCISCO, 

CAL. 

February  13— Harry  Harris  not  at  Smoke  Shop  or  bench. 


CORRECT  STATIONERY 

For  every  function,  correct  in  finish,  correct 
in  style,  correct  in  price.  Cards,  invita- 
tions,  programs,  etc. 

SPECIAL  SUMMER  BOOKS 

5000  from  which  to  make  your  choice,  for- 
merly $1.50,  now  50c. 


KODAKS 

and  Photo  Supplies.  Developing  and 
printing  by  experts.  Our  reproductions 
of  recent  fete  were  pronounced  by  those  in 
charge  as  best  made. 


SMITH  BROTHERS 


472-474-13th  Street 


OAKLAND 


/^OLLEGE  MEN  always  have  found  that  the  "Roos-Made" 
^_>^  lines  are  selected  with  special  consideration  for  young  men's 
requirements. 

Graduates  who  desire  to  maintain  a  reputation  for  dressing 
correctly  and  in  good  taste,  find  the  "Roos-Made"  lines  in  com- 
plete sympathy  with  their  ideas. 

The  importance  of  good  clothing  as  an  aid  toward  the  attain- 
ment of  the  goal  of  your  career  can  not  be  overestimated. 

Let  us  co-operate  with  you  in  the  realization  of  your  ambition. 

Market  and  Stockton  Streets 
SAN  FRANCISCO 


<7Z^r 


BERKELEY'S    LADIES    TOGGERY 

A  full  lino  of  Ladies'  and  Children's  AVear 

Always 

on 
Hand 


PHONE  609 


Popular  Prices 

2142  CENTER  STREET 


February  14 — Harris  reported  very  sick. 


LAKE 
TAHOE 

California  \s 

Popular  Mountain 

Resort 


Season  May  15  to  October  15 

Best  trout  fishing  in  the  state;  excellent  hotel  accommodations;  also  camping  privileges. 

Write  for  descriptive  booklets 

D.  L.  BLISS,  Jr. 

General  Manager  Lake  Tahoe  Railnvay  &  Transportation  Company 

TAHOE,  CALIFORNIA 


San  Francisco-Oakland  Terminal  Rys. 


The    Comfortable,    Convenient   and    Rapid   Way    between 
SAN  FRANCISCO,  OAKLAND  and  BERKELEY 


Service  between  Berkeley  and  San  Francisco  every  20  Minutes. 


February  15 — Harris  returns  with  his  own  tobacco. 


Lynne  Stanley 


Exclusive 
Haberdasher 


PLENTY  OF 
B.  V.  D's 

CHENEY  TIES  and 
SUMMER  SHIRTS 


1222  Broadway,  Oakland 


When  Tou  Eat 


call  on 


Bill 
The  Dog-Man 

Telegraph  Avenue 


WELLS    FARGO    NEVADA  NATIONAL 

OF  SAN  FRANCISCO 
Northeast  Corner  Montgomery  and    Market  Streets. 

CAPITAL,   SURPLUS  AND  UNDIVIDED  PROFIT. ..  .$11,037,979.01 

DEPOSITS  27,190,440.80 

TOTAL  RESOURCES  46,211,961.57 


BANK 


Isaias  W.  Hellman,  President 

I.    W.    Hellman,    Jr.,     Vice-President 

F.    L.    Lipman,    Vice-President 


Isaias  W.  Hellman 
Joseph  Sloss 
Percy  T.  Morgan 
F.  W.  Van  Sicklen 


OFFICERS 

James  K.   Wilson,    Vice-President 
Frank   B.    King,    Cashier 
W.    McGavin,   Asst.   Cashier 
A.  B.  Price,  Asst.  Cashier 

DIRECTORS 

Wm.  F.  Herrin  Wm.  Haas 

John  C.  Kirkpatrick  Hartlanrt  Law 

I.  W.  Hellman.  Jr.  Henry  Rosenfeld 

A.  Christeson  James  L.  Flood 

F.  L.  Lipman 


A.  D.  Oliver,  Asst.  Cashier 
C.  L.  Davis,  Asst.  Cashier 
E.   L.   Jacobs,   Asst.    Cashier 


J.  Henry  Meyer 
A.  H.  Payson 
Chas.  J.  Deering 
James  K.  Wilson 


Students  are  cordially  invited  to  mike  use  of  all  of  our  facilities.    Individual  accounts  accepted  subject 
to  check— Safe  Deposit  Boxes  for  rent  and  valuables  taken  on  storage  in  our 
Safe  Deposit  Department. 


E.  W.  BRIGGS 


The  Pioneer 
Tobacconist 


vestibule,  chronicle  bldg.     of  San  Francisco 


February  16 — Harry  was  sick. 


February  17 — Two  miners  seen  in  the  Library  at  once. 


Oakland:  532  Fourteenth  Street 
San  Jose:  41  North  First  Street 
Sacramento:  422  K  Street 


Special  Rates 
Extended 
to  Students 


RAFER^ 


1142  Market  Street 


SAN  FRANCISCO 


The  Jacobi  $25.00  Guaranteed 
Blue  Serge  Suit  is  fast  winning  a 
name  for  itself  with  men  both 
young  and  old. 

J.  M.  JACOBI  &  CO.        Montgomery  &  Sutter  Sts. 


Labor  Day,  9  o'clock — Tom  Veitch  refuses  to  work. 


£2  3?*  2 


Labor  Day,  10  o'clock — Picture  companies  arrive. 


F.  C.  THIELE 

VARSITY    TAILOR 


17  Years 

of 
Popularity 


EXAMINER  BUILDING 


CORNER 

Market  and  Third  Streets 
SAN  FRANCISCO 


Labor  Day,   10:01 — Veitch  starts  work. 


